Archive

2025

Browsing

The Crimson Tide on Monday, Aug. 11, named Ty Simpson their starting quarterback for their season opener against Florida State, the Tuscaloosa News reproted. The team was informed of the decision.

Simpson, a redshirt junior, has waited his turn as a backup for Alabama, and the former five-star recruit will finally get his shot to lead the offense. He beat out freshman five-star recruit Keelon Russell and redshirt sophomore Austin Mack, who followed coach Kalen DeBoer from Washington via transfer portal.

“It’s not how I drew it up for sure,” Simpson told The Tuscaloosa News in January. “I think anybody could tell you that. But it’s God’s plan and I think, ultimately, it will make me a better player.’

Simpson has completed 29 of 50 passes for 381 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions across three seasons in a reserve role. He has rushed for 130 yards with three touchdowns over the past two seasons, however.

Simpson will also operate under a new offensive coordinator in Ryan Grubb this season, as Grubb joined the Crimson Tide in the offseason after serving as the Seattle Seahawks play caller. Grubb was DeBoer’s offensive coordinator in 2023 when Washington, one of the best offenses in college football that season, made the national championship game.

The Martin, Tennessee, native was the No. 26 overall recruit in the 2022 recruiting class, according to 247Sports’ Composite rankings. He was also the No. 3 quarterback nationally and No. 2 player in Tennessee.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Retired tennis star Monica Seles recently announced her diagnosis of myasthenia gravis (MG), a neuromuscular autoimmune disease.
MG causes muscle weakness and fatigue, and while incurable, it affects over 120,000 people in the U.S.
Seles, diagnosed three years ago, experienced symptoms like double vision while playing tennis.

Former tennis star Monica Seles says she has been diagnosed with myasthenia gravis, a neuromuscular autoimmune disease that causes muscles to get tired and very weak.

Seles, 51, was diagnosed three years ago when she says that she noticed the symptoms when hitting tennis balls with people and would sometimes see two balls coming her way instead of one.

‘My MG journey over the past 5 years has not been an easy one. I felt isolated and defeated as many of the activities I enjoyed were no longer physically possible for me,’ Seles said on Argenx.com. Argenx is an immunology company located in the Netherlands.

‘I’ve since realized that by sharing my story, I can raise awareness of this disease, empower patients to advocate for themselves and help them connect with the MG community for support.’

The nine-time Grand Slam champion retired from tennis in 2008.

‘I had to, in tennis terms, I guess, reset – hard reset – a few times. I call my first hard reset when I came to the U.S. as a young 13-year-old (from Yugoslavia). Didn’t speak the language; left my family. It’s a very tough time,’ Seles told the Associated Press. ‘Then, obviously, becoming a great player, it’s a reset, too, because the fame, money, the attention, changes (everything), and it’s hard as a 16-year-old to deal with all that. Then obviously my stabbing (in 1993) – I had to do a huge reset.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 college football season kicks down the front door with a series of marquee non-conference games in Week 1, starting with a high-profile pairing of two of the top teams from the Big Ten and SEC.

That would defending national champion Ohio State and Texas, last seen matching wits in the Buckeyes’ 28-14 win in College Football Playoff semifinals at the Cotton Bowl.

This postseason system, especially with the expanded format, has removed the do-or-die nature of this season openers. Even still, the game in Columbus will color the perception of both teams and both leagues as the Big Ten and SEC jockey for position in the playoff race.

But that’s not the only cross-conference matchup with postseason ramifications. There’s also the Death Valley bragging-rights matchup between LSU and Clemson and a historic rivalry renewed between Notre Dame and Miami, not to mention Alabama’s road trip to Florida State to kick off coach Kalen DeBoer’s second season. Ending the weekend on Labor Day is the start of the Bill Belichick era at North Carolina.

We’re just weeks away from this buffet-style feast to get things started in the Bowl Subdivision.

Here are the 10 games you can’t miss from Week 1:

Nebraska vs. Cincinnati (in Kansas City, Missouri), Aug. 28

The only Power Four-only matchup of the first Thursday of the regular season pits a trendy contender in Nebraska against a Cincinnati program struggling to gain a foothold under third-year coach Scott Satterfield. A convincing Nebraska win combined with a strong game from sophomore quarterback Dylan Raiola will support the increasing faith in the Cornhuskers’ chances of finally earning a Top 25 finish.

Auburn at Baylor, Aug. 29

It’s make-or-break time for Hugh Freeze at Auburn. He’s stockpiled some major talent via traditional recruiting and the portal, including former Oklahoma quarterback Jackson Arnold, and there are no more excuses as he starts his third year. But Baylor could be a beast in the Big 12 after winning its last six games of the regular season in 2024. A victory by the Bears in this Friday matchup would give the league’s national reputation a much-needed boost.

Georgia Tech at Colorado, Aug. 29

Colorado is in a state of transition after losing Shedeur Sanders and Travis Hunter. What will the Buffaloes look like in 2025? Can Deion Sanders continue to build on last year’s nine-win campaign. Starting with a victory won’t be easy. Georgia Tech is highly physical and very tough to handle in the trenches, putting the focus in this opener on Colorado’s defensive front.

No. 1 Texas at No. 2 Ohio State, Aug. 30

This is one of the most anticipated season openers in years with the top two teams in the preseason Coaches Poll. Arch Manning will be making his debut as the Longhorns’ full-time starter. The Buckeyes will break in their own new starter, likely Julian Sayin. The result will color the perception of both teams and both leagues while impacting how the selection committee ranks the 12 playoff teams in December.

Alabama at Florida State, Aug. 30

This one feels bigger for Alabama despite FSU’s desperate need for a rebound after last year’s nightmare. Losing in Tallahassee would be a dreadful way to start DeBoer’s second year and force a reevaluation of the Crimson Tide’s place in the SEC pecking order.

LSU at Clemson, Aug. 30

If not for Ohio State and Texas, this would be the defining game of Week 1 and maybe the biggest non-conference game of the season. LSU needs a big year to take the pressure off Brian Kelly, and breaking the streak of three consecutive losses in openers would help. Clemson has immense expectations thanks to one of the nation’s top passers in Cade Klubnik and a roster built to win the ACC and the national title. A win by Dabo Swinney’s bunch could rocket Clemson back to the top of the Bowl Subdivision.

Utah at UCLA, Aug. 30

Nico Iamaleava makes his UCLA debut against a Utah team that will be dramatically improved heading into what may be coach Kyle Whittingham’s final season. The Utes have reimagined their offense with new offensive coordinator Jason Beck and new quarterback Devin Dampier, both brought in from New Mexico. UCLA isn’t a realistic Big Ten contender, but the Bruins play hard, tough football under coach DeShaun Foster and will get much more at quarterback thanks to the addition of the Tennessee transfer.

Virginia Tech vs. South Carolina (in Atlanta), Aug. 31

The Hokies are treading water at best under coach Brent Pry. They need to make a move up the ACC standings to take him off the hot seat. Much will ride on the health of quarterback Kyron Drones. Tech will have its hands full from the start against the Gamecocks and highly touted sophomore quarterback LaNorris Sellers, who might be the most underrecognized young star in the FBS.

Notre Dame at Miami, Aug. 31

This should be our first look at new Miami starter Carson Beck, if he’s fully recovered from the injury suffered in last year’s SEC title game. It should also be the first glance at new Notre Dame passer C.J. Carr, the favorite to claim the starting job. The Irish are loaded for another run at the national title; going unbeaten in the regular season isn’t out of the question. Miami is also looking to take the next step.

TCU at North Carolina, Sept. 1

Belichick will get started in Chapel Hill with a matchup against a true Big 12 contender in TCU. Facing off against the Horned Frogs’ highly productive offense will help paint a picture of where the Tar Heels stand in Belichick’s debut and whether this team is capable of building on the gains made under former coach Mack Brown and competing in the ACC.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The New York Jets are receiving the documentary treatment.

Debuting Aug. 21, ‘The Home Team’ is a six-part docuseries that will stream on Amazon’s Prime Video and follows six Jets players and their partners throughout the 17-week NFL season.

The content may not be overly rosy. New York fired its former head coach Robert Saleh five games into the 2024-25 season, which the documentary covers, and the team finished 5-12.

Jets defensive lineman Quinnen Williams and offensive lineman Alijah Vera-Tucker are among the players featured.

“From business endeavors to baby showers to family reunions, The Home Team: NY Jets will take viewers inside the professional and personal lives of these diverse, lovable couples, in order to show how family makes football possible,” Amazon said in a news release announcing the series in May.

Jets Amazon series release date

Release date: Thursday, Aug. 21

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The White House criticized a judge’s decision not to unseal grand jury materials related to the sex trafficking case against Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell, calling the ruling ‘unfortunate.’ 

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt made the remark after U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer on Monday shot down the motion filed by the Justice Department, finding the documents do not contain ‘significant, undisclosed information about [their] crimes, or the investigation into them.’ 

‘We think that decision is unfortunate. Of course, we moved to unseal that information because the president has said he wants to see credible evidence released. As for the appeal process, I would defer you to the Department of Justice for that,’ Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday. 

Last month, President Donald Trump said he supported Attorney General Pam Bondi releasing ‘credible’ files from Epstein’s sex trafficking case, noting that ‘She’s handled it very well, and it’s going to be up to her, whatever she thinks is credible she should release.’ 

Engelmayer wrote in his 31-page opinion that only two ‘features’ of the grand jury evidence were noteworthy, summarizing them in his decision: 

‘First, the grand juries in this case were not used for investigative purposes,’ he wrote. ‘They did not hear testimony from any firsthand witness to any event at issue. They did not hear testimony from any victim, eyewitness, suspect, or even a records custodian. The grand juries met instead for the quotidian purpose of returning an indictment.’ 

The only witnesses were members of law enforcement, and each grand jury heard evidence only for one day, he wrote. 

‘Second, the evidence put before the Maxwell grand juries is today, with only very minor exceptions, a matter of public record,’ Engelmayer continued. ‘The Government admitted as much.’ 

In addition to transcripts of grand jury testimony, the Justice Department also wanted to unseal additional evidence presented as exhibits to the grand jurors. They were expected to include more names than have been publicly associated with the latter in criminal and civil court proceedings. 

But Engelmayer denied the government’s request for the exhibits, too. 

Fox News’ Ashley Oliver contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been sidelined from peace talks between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin Friday because the Russian leader extended the invitation to meet, according to the White House. 

‘The president is agreeing to this meeting, at the request of President Putin,’ White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Tuesday. ‘And the goal of this meeting for the president is to walk away with a better understanding of how we can end this war.’ 

‘I think the president of the United States getting in the room with the president of Russia ,sitting face-to-face rather than speaking over the telephone will give this president the best indication of how to end this war and where this is headed,’ Leavitt said. 

Meanwhile Zelenskyy has remained firm that any decisions to end the war made without Ukraine will prove futile. 

‘Any decisions made against us, any decisions made without Ukraine — they are simultaneously decisions against peace,’ Zelenskyy said in a Saturday statement. ‘These are dead decisions; they will never work. And what we all need is a real, living peace, one that people will respect.’

Other European allies have Ukraine’s back. A group of European leaders issued a statement Saturday claiming that the ‘path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without Ukraine.’

Trump told reporters Monday that he predicted he’d know within minutes whether Putin was serious about hashing out a deal or not. He also acknowledged that Russia and Ukraine would have to navigate some ‘land swapping’ issues as part of an agreement. 

Trump also said he would be in contact with Zelenskyy and other European leaders following the meeting with Putin. 

‘If it’s a fair deal, I will reveal it to the European Union leaders and the NATO leaders and also to President Zelenskyy,’ Trump said. ‘I may say, ‘lots of luck, keep fighting,’ or I may say we can make a deal.’

When asked if the meeting would pave the way for a peace deal, or whether the meeting would simply serve as an opportunity for Trump to feel out if a deal was even possible, Leavitt said the administration wasn’t ruling out either option.

‘I think both can be true, right?’ Leavitt said. ‘The president has always said he wants a peace deal. He wants to see this war come to an end. But this bilateral meeting is a bilateral meeting between one party in this two party war. Right. You need both countries to agree to a deal. The president is accepting this bilateral meeting with Putin on Friday, and I will let him speak further to it after it concludes about how he felt it went.’ 

Trump and Putin are scheduled to meet in Anchorage, Alaska, Friday — despite the president’s comments in recent days that the two would meet in Russia. 

‘There were many sites discussed, but of course, Alaska is a state within the United States of America,’ Leavitt said. ‘So the president is very honored and looks forward to hosting President Putin on American soil.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The U.S. State Department found that the human rights situation in South Africa has ‘significantly worsened’ over the past year, citing reports of ‘extrajudicial killings’ and repression against racial minorities.

The State Department conducts an annual review of the human rights situations in countries across the globe, and it targeted South Africa with new criticism in the 2025 report released Tuesday. The report, scheduled to be sent to Congress on Tuesday, pointed to the U.S. receiving several reports of the South African ‘government or its agents’ carrying out extrajudicial or arbitrary killings, as well as repression of Afrikaner minorities.

‘In July the provincial police commissioner confirmed that as of April, police shot and killed at least 40 criminal suspects in shoot-outs. On September 2, police reported six suspects wanted for homicide and extortion were shot and killed by Durban police in a shoot-out. According to Reuters, eight of the police officers involved were placed on administrative leave with full pay pending investigation,’ the report said.

‘Watchdog groups noted deaths in custody often resulted from physical abuse combined with a lack of subsequent medical treatment or neglect,’ it continued.

‘According to data compiled by Agence France-Presse, there were 447 murders on farms and smallholdings between October 2023 and September 2024. In recent years, extremist political party the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) encouraged attacks on Afrikaner farmers, reviving the use of the song ‘Kill the Boer [Farmer]’ at its rallies and otherwise inciting violence,’ the report added.

The State Department went on to criticize wider repression tactics against Afrikaners, citing The Expropriation Bill of 2024, in particular. The legislation allows the government to seize land without compensation in some circumstances.

‘This act could enable the government to seize ethnic minority Afrikaners’ agricultural property without compensation, following countless government policies designed to dismantle equal opportunity in employment, education, and business, and extreme rhetoric and government actions fueling disproportionate violence against racially disfavored landowners,’ the report said.

President Donald Trump confronted South African President Cyril Ramaphosa at the White House during a state visit in May.

Trump has claimed that White Afrikaner South African farmers are being slaughtered and forced off their land. The Afrikaners are descendants of mostly Dutch settlers who first arrived in South Africa in 1652.

‘Now this is very bad. These are burial sites right here. Burial sites — over a thousand — of White farmers. And those cars are lined up to pay love on a Sunday morning. Each one of those white things you see is a cross. And there is approximately a thousand of them,’ Trump said at the time. ‘They’re all White farmers. The family of White farmers. And those cars aren’t, driving, they are stopped there to pay respects to their family member who was killed. And it’s a terrible sight. I’ve never seen anything like it. On both sides of the road, you have crosses. Those people are all killed.’

South Africa denies claims of genocide and harassment, as does its president.

‘I’m not going to be repeating what I’ve been saying,’ Ramaphosa said at the May visit. ‘I would say if there was Afrikaner farmer genocide, I can bet you these three gentlemen would not be here, including my Minister of Agriculture. He would not be with me.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

An environmental advocacy group accused of trying to manipulate judges has removed and anonymized the names of jurists who worked with the activist network and praised its activities, following a Fox News Digital report exposing an online forum promoting climate litigation updates.

The Climate Judiciary Project (CJP), founded in 2018 by the left-wing Environmental Law Institute, describes itself as providing judges with ‘authoritative, objective, and trusted education on climate science, the impacts of climate change, and the ways climate science is arising in the law,’ according to its website.

The group has been accused by Republican lawmakers, such as Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, of working to ‘train judges’ and ‘make them agreeable to creative climate litigation tactics.’ In July, Fox News Digital reported on CJP’s yearslong, nationwide forum where jurists privately exchanged climate-related legal updates and information alongside CJP leadership — a forum that was abruptly made private in May 2024.

CJP’s testimonial page boasting praise from jurists who participated in the program was overhauled this summer, including obliterating testimony from a judge identified in Fox News Digital’s July report. Fox Digital reviewed archived links to CJP’s testimonial page and found Judge Sam Scheele’s comments were still public on the site in May but were removed by the end of July following Fox Digital’s report. 

‘It’s been truly a privilege. I am welcomely absorbing everything that has been brought to us and I look forward to carrying that forward and paying it forward,’ read a quote from Scheele when he served on Indiana’s Lake Superior Court’s Civil Division, according to an archived link of the website’s page from May. 

At the end of July, another archived link showed that Scheele’s quote and name had been removed from CJP’s testimonial page, while four other quotes were attributed to anonymous ‘participating judges.’ One remaining quote was still attributed to the former president of the William & Flora Hewlett Foundation, a nonprofit that funds progressive causes in the U.S. It is unclear the exact day the changes were made to the testimonial page. 

A spokesperson for the Environmental Law Institute told Fox Digital when asked about changes to the testimonial page that updates were made out of an effort to ‘protect privacy and prevent baseless criticism and harassment.’ 

‘Judges are encouraged, and many required, to participate in continuing education on topics relevant to emerging trends in the law – including those related to science. Recent changes to CJP’s website were made to protect privacy and prevent baseless criticism and harassment,’ the spokesperson said. 

Scheele was among a handful of judges who communicated on CJP’s online forum that ran from September 2022 and maintained until May 2024, according to documents previously reviewed by Fox News Digital. While Scheele’s testimony was obliterated from the website’s testimonial page, two other favorable quotes from judges were anonymized and attributed to a ‘participating judge,’ while two other quotes remained unchanged and were both attributed to a ‘participating judge,’ Fox News Digital found. 

Fox News Digital obtained the archived chat history of the now-defunct chat forum between CJP and jurists last month, which detailed numerous messages between at least five judges and CJP employees trading links on climate studies, congratulating one another on hosting recent environmental events, sharing updates on recent climate cases that were remanded to state courts, and encouraging each other to participate in other CJP meet-ups. 

One message posted by Delaware Judge Travis Laster, vice chancellor of the Delaware Court of Chancery, features a YouTube video of a 2022 climate presentation delivered by a Delaware official and a Columbia University professor that focused on the onslaught of climate lawsuits since the mid-2000s. 

It also included claims that such lawsuits could one day bankrupt the fuel industry. 

Laster shared the video in the group with a disclaimer to others: ‘Because the link is of a judicial event that is otherwise not public, please do not forward or use without checking with me. I suspect that goes without saying, but the powers that be will be happier that I said it.’

Scheele was among a handful of other judges who responded to Laster’s video and message, praising it as ‘great work.’

‘This is great work/great stuff, Travis; congrats on a job well-done, & thank you so much for sharing this!,’ Scheele responded, according to documents obtained by Fox News Digital. 

Scheele’s office did not respond to Fox Digital’s request for comment regarding why his name and testimony were removed from the website. 

Scheele’s office did respond to Fox News Digital’s inquiry last month regarding his past participation in the forum, saying he first joined the 2022 National Judicial Conference on Climate Science more than two years before his appointment to the Indiana Court of Appeals. 

‘At the last minute, when another appointed delegate was unexpectedly unable to attend, Judge Scheele was asked by Indiana’s state court administration to fill in as Indiana’s representative, and he accepted the invitation. As is normal in conferences attended by our judges, this conference addressed emerging, hot-button issues that might come before the courts,’ Scheele’s office said. 

‘Judge Scheele does not recall any substantive communication on the ‘listserv’ mentioned. He, like all of our Court of Appeals of Indiana judges, is dedicated to the unbiased, apolitical administration of justice in the State. He, like all of our judges, educates himself on emergent topics in the law and applies his legal training to evaluate the legal issues before him,’ the office continued. 

CJP told Fox News Digital of the now-defunct email list last month that it was created in September 2022 to help members of its Judicial Leaders in Climate Science program communicate and network with one another for the duration of the program.

The one-year program, established by CJP in coordination with the National Judicial College, ‘trains state court judges on judicial leadership skills integrated with consensus climate science and how it is arising in the law,’ the group told Fox News Digital.

CJP’s educational events are done ‘in partnership with leading national judicial education institutions and state judicial authorities, in accordance with their accepted standards,’ a spokesperson for the group said in an emailed statement. ‘Its curriculum is fact-based and science-first, grounded in consensus reports and developed with a robust peer review process that meets the highest scholarly standards.’

‘CJP’s work is no different than the work of other continuing judicial education organizations that address important complex topics, including medicine, tech and neuroscience,’ the spokesperson added.

News of the program’s outreach comes as the U.S. has seen a sharp uptick in climate-related lawsuits in recent years — including cases targeting oil giants Shell, BP and ExxonMobil for allegedly using ‘deceptive’ marketing and downplaying the risks of climate change, as well as lawsuits brought against state governments and federal agencies, including the Interior Department, for allegedly failing to address pollution risks or protect against the harms of climate change, according to the plaintiffs.

Sen. Cruz has repeatedly put CJP under the public’s microscope, including in June during a Senate subcommittee hearing, called ‘Enter the Dragon – China and the Left’s Lawfare Against American Energy Dominance,’ where the Texas Republican argued there is a ‘systematic campaign’ launched by the Chinese Communist Party and American left-wing activists to weaponize the court systems to ‘undermine American energy dominance.’ 

CJP, Cruz said, is a pivotal player in the ‘lawfare’ as it works to secure ‘judicial capture.’ 

Cruz said CJP’s claims of neutrality are bluster, and the group instead allegedly promotes ‘ex parte indoctrination, pressuring judges to set aside the rule of law, and rule instead according to a predetermined political narrative.’

CJP has denied Cruz’s accusations, and describes itself as ‘neutral, objective information to the judiciary about the science of climate change as it is understood by the expert scientific community and relevant to current and future litigation.’

Judges have previously landed in hot water over climate-related issues in group forums, including in 2019, when a federal judge hit ‘reply all’ to an email chain with 45 other judges and court staff regarding an invitation to a climate seminar for judges hosted by the Environmental Law Institute. The judge was subsequently chastised by colleagues for sharing ‘this nonsense’ and suggested it was an ethics violation, while others defended that flagging the event to others was not unethical. 

Fox News Digital’s Breanne Deppisch and Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

An Israeli nongovernmental organization is working behind the scenes to provide a critical link between the Israeli military and international organizations with one goal in mind: Get humanitarian aid to Palestinian civilians.

‘We really became this informal connector and facilitator between the Israeli authorities and the humanitarian community,’ IsraAID CEO Yotam Polizer said.

IsraAID has worked in 64 countries and is currently the largest humanitarian organization based out of Israel. 

Polizer says there is broad consensus now that a concerning humanitarian level was reached in Gaza with pockets of malnutrition across the strip. He notes that it isn’t only food that is needed by the civilian population, but also medicine, water and nutritional provisions.

‘When we reach severe malnutrition levels, we know that just rice and flour is not going to solve the problem,’ Polizer added. ‘We need nutritional supplements, we need people to get protein.’ 

For nearly five months, there was no consistent flow of aid. That has changed in recent weeks with thousands of trucks being distributed along with airdrops of supplies to civilians. Recently, the entry of commercial trucks was partially approved.

‘The declared policy of Israel for two and a half months after the ceasefire collapsed was that nothing comes in,’ Polizer said. ‘That was the policy because the plan was to pressure Hamas.’

The IsraAID CEO says the focus must be on saving lives, not on playing the ‘blame game.’ He urges the United Nations, the Israel Defense Forces, the  Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) and all humanitarian organizations to work together and find solutions.

‘As a humanitarian organization, the concept of ‘do no harm’ is really our Bible,’ Polizer added.

A few months after the war started, IsraAID started to receive requests from global humanitarian organizations they had worked with in Afghanistan and Ukraine, asking for help to facilitate aid deliveries to Gaza.

These groups had issues with customs clearance and approval from the Israeli military to deliver supplies to Palestinians in Gaza. These were problems IsraAID could help solve.

Despite the political and cultural differences, Polizer said the Jewish community of the United States is stepping up to donate and support finding solutions for the hunger crisis in Gaza.

‘You can support the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, but it does not mean you are anti-Israel,’ he concluded.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The U.S. State Department’s annual human rights report delivered a grim assessment of conditions in Venezuela, declaring that human rights have fallen to a new low following reports of widespread abuses and state-sanctioned repression, particularly after the July 2024 presidential election when Nicolás Maduro clung to power. 

‘The human rights situation in Venezuela significantly worsened,’ the report reads. ‘Throughout the year, and particularly after the July 28 [2024] presidential election, Nicolás Maduro and his representatives engaged in serious human rights abuses, reaching a new milestone in the degradation of the rule of law’ after the election, according to the U.N. Independent International fact-finding mission on the country in September.

According to the most recent State Department report, credible evidence indicates a dramatic escalation in arbitrary or unlawful killings, disappearances, torture and harsh prison conditions. NGOs and U.N. observers documented extensive restrictions on freedom of expression, with journalists and human rights defenders facing arrests, harassment and censorship. The judiciary remained deeply compromised — unable or unwilling to hold perpetrators accountable for abuses.

The report noted that the United Nations International Fact Finding Mission stated at least 25 people were killed in the first days following the July 2024 elections, including two children. 

Pro-Maduro leaders ‘harassed and intimidated privately-owned and democratic opposition-oriented television stations, media outlets, and journalists’ through threats, property seizures and prosecutions.

The sweeping report, which will go public Tuesday afternoon, also calls out Brazil and South America for human rights abuses. 

In a parallel diplomatic maneuver, the U.S. Department of Justice, backed by the State Department, significantly increased the reward for Maduro’s capture from $25 million to $50 million. Attorney General Pam Bondi accused Maduro of leading one of the world’s most notorious narco-trafficking operations, including associations with the Tren de Aragua, Sinaloa cartel and the infamous Cartel of the Suns. The Drug Enforcement Administration has reportedly seized 30 tons of cocaine linked to Maduro and his allies, with nearly seven tons directly tied to him.

This nullified the previous reward levels — $15 million initially set during Trump’s first term, later raised to $25 million under the Biden administration. Venezuela’s foreign ministry dismissed the bounty as a ‘political propaganda operation.’

The State Department report highlights an alarming absence of credible efforts by Venezuelan authorities to investigate or prosecute those responsible for human rights violations. Security forces, including the military, police, and colectivos — pro-Maduro armed groups — were repeatedly implicated in abuses, yet the justice system remained ineffective, allowing a culture of impunity to flourish.

Maduro was indicted in Manhattan court in 2020, during the first Trump administration, on narco-terrorism charges. 

The dictatorial Venezuelan leader held onto power after the 2024 presidential election where the U.S. and much of Europe recognized his opposition as Venezuela’s duly elected president.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS