Monday, May 26, 2025

Trump accuses Harvard of 'judge shopping' and threatens to send $3 billion in federal grants to trade schoolsNew Foto - Trump accuses Harvard of 'judge shopping' and threatens to send $3 billion in federal grants to trade schools

President Donald Trump on Monday again trained hisire on Harvard University, accusing the school of "judge shopping" during its legal battle with the administration and threatening to cut off $3 billion in federal grant funding over the university's handling of anti-Israel protests. "I am considering taking Three Billion Dollars of Grant Money away from a very antisemitic Harvard, and giving it to TRADE SCHOOLS all across our land," Trump wrote on social media. "What a great investment that would be for the USA, and so badly needed!!!" Trump's newest threats come as Harvard begins its spring commencement week in the shadow of a months-long feud between the Ivy League school and the Trump administration over antisemitism, federal funding and the First Amendment. In its latest move, the Trump administration banned Harvard University's ability to enroll international students – a decisionswiftly haltedby a federal judge hours after the nation's oldest and wealthiest university filed suit. The president has also threatened to revokeHarvard's tax-exempt status. Now, the university's future ability to enroll international students – which make up about 27% of the student body – will depend on how the case plays out in court, with the litigation adding to the piling docket of legal battles for the administration. A hearing in the case is expected to take place Tuesday. Harvard also sued Trump last month over the administration'sfreezing of $2.2 billionin federal funding after the university wouldn't agree to policy changes demanded by the White House. That case, along with the lawsuit over international students, has been assigned to US District Court Judge Allison Dale Burroughs. Thisisn't Burroughs' first high-profile case involving Harvard University. As a federal judge in 2019, she upheld the Ivy League's admissions process in an affirmative action case – a decision the US Supreme Court later overturned. She ruled that while Harvard's admissions process was "not perfect," she would not "dismantle a very fine admissions program that passes constitutional muster, solely because it could do better." As a federal district judge, she's also put guardrails on the Trump administration before in cases related to his 2017 travel ban targeting predominantly Muslim countries, international students during the coronavirus pandemic, and the Department of Energy's recent cuts to federal research funding. In his Monday post, Trump also took aim atthe bipartisan practice of "judge shopping,"where plaintiffs file cases outside their obvious court of jurisdiction in an effort to be assigned a judge who may have a more favorable review of the litigation compared to a random assignment. Members of both parties have used the practice to further their policy goals. "The best thing Harvard has going for it is that they have shopped around and found the absolute best Judge (for them!) - But have no fear, the Government will, in the end, WIN!" Trump wrote Monday. CNN has reached out to Harvard for comment. But Harvard, a Massachusetts-based school, would be expected to bring any lawsuits in Boston's federal court. Still, the district has no Trump appointees, and the federal appellate court overseeing New England is perceived as a tough venue for the president's more hardline, politically sensitive cases. This week, Trump also sent shockwaves through campus when he demanded the "names and countries" of the thousands of international students at Harvard University. "We are still waiting for the Foreign Student Lists from Harvard so that we can determine, after a ridiculous expenditure of BILLIONS OF DOLLARS, how many radicalized lunatics, troublemakers all, should not be let back into our Country. Harvard is very slow in the presentation of these documents, and probably for good reason!" Trump said on social media. Harvard already shares a list, as of October 2024, of the countries where its thousands of foreign students are from, with the most students coming from China, followed by Canada, India, South Korea and the United Kingdom. Harvard and the Trump administration are scheduled to meet in court on Thursday and argue their cases to Burroughs, who will decide whether to extend her decision to block the government's actions by issuing a preliminary injunction. At the same time as the scheduled hearing, nearly 9,000 degree candidates are due to be celebratingcommencementon Harvard's campus, just 6 miles from the federal courthouse. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump accuses Harvard of ‘judge shopping’ and threatens to send $3 billion in federal grants to trade schools

Trump accuses Harvard of 'judge shopping' and threatens to send $3 billion in federal grants to trade schools President Donald Trump...
3 more New Orleans inmates captured today, leaving 2 at largeNew Foto - 3 more New Orleans inmates captured today, leaving 2 at large

A week and a half after 10 inmates broke out of a New Orleans jail, three of the escapees were captured Monday — leaving only two at large, according to the Louisiana State Police. Inmate Lenton Vanburen was detained in Baton Rouge, 72 miles northwest of New Orleans, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said in apost on X, while Leo Tate and Jermaine Donald were taken into custody in Walker County, Texas ,by the Texas Department of Public Safety. Van buren was originally in jail on suspicion of a parole violation, possession of firearm by felon and illegal carrying of a weapon, Murrill said. "He will now face additional charges related to the escape," she added. No additional details have been released about Tate and Donald's recapture. The inmates caught Monday were the first of the escapees found outside of New Orleans. Authorities continue to search for two additional escaped inmates, asseven peoplehave been arrested in connection with assisting them. Aside from the three men captured Monday, Kendell Myles, Robert Moody, Dkenan Dennis, Gary Price and Corey Boyd are back in custody. Derrick Groves and Antoine Massey remain at large and are considered armed and dangerous. The inmates allegedly used electric hair trimmers with multiple clipper blades to helpcut their waythrough the cell walls, a source with direct knowledge of the investigation told CNN. The capture of three inmates across two states Monday brings authorities closer to ending a prison breakblamed onfaulty locks, stolen blankets and a hungry employee who allegedly played a role in their escape. Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams and AG Murrill visited the Orleans Justice Center earlier this week as part of the ongoing investigation into the escape. Additionally, the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections is deploying at least 10 seasoned auditors to the Orleans Justice Center to investigate the jailbreak. The district attorney said last week the director of the New Orleans Police Department Crime Lab visited the jail to begin a formal forensic processing of the scene, which he said was not requested by the sheriff's office. Williams asked the sheriff's office to voluntarily cooperate with the forensic analysis by sharing any records of staff fingerprints or DNA "for the purpose of inclusion or elimination of their profiles," according to a letter Williams sent to the sheriff's office on Thursday that was obtained by CNN. A separate letter from Thursday formally requested the sheriff's officepreserve all recordsrelated to the jailbreak, including surveillance video and electronic communications between staff. "If you were manning the security system, you would have known a door was opening," former Orleans Parish Sheriff Marlin Gusman, who ran the jail from 2004 to 2022, told CNN. "Especially in the middle of the night," Gusman said. Gusman told CNN he has no idea how the inmates got into the pipe chase behind the toilet and sink, but emphasized they had to navigate through walls made with a "substantial" network of concrete molding about "5 inches thick" and mixed with rebar, which is reinforced steel. A maintenance worker with the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office, Sterling Williams, was arrested Tuesday. Williams, 33, is accused of "willfully and maliciously" assisting with the jailbreak, according to an affidavit. He faces one count of malfeasance in office and 10 counts of being a principal to simple escape. Williams' attorney, Michael Kennedy, said the worker was turning off water to an overflowing toilet after being told to do so and is"fully convinced"of his client's innocence. Six other people are being accused of helping the inmates in some way, including an inmate already in custody in the same facility the escapees broke out of. Investigators continue to comb through previous jail phone recordings and believe that other incarcerated inmates or employees at the jail could face additional charges for their role assisting in escape and initial cover-up in the hours following the jailbreak, according to the source with direct knowledge of the investigation. Trevon Williamswas arrested on Friday in connection with the inmates' escape. Trevon Williams, who was already in jail on unrelated charges, was rebooked on an additional charge of principal to simple escape, according toan X postfrom Murrill. The others arrested are accused of being accessories after the fact, authorities said. This story has been updated with additional information. CNN's Ryan Young contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

3 more New Orleans inmates captured today, leaving 2 at large

3 more New Orleans inmates captured today, leaving 2 at large A week and a half after 10 inmates broke out of a New Orleans jail, three of t...
Deputies shoot man who survived apparent gator attack and tried to steal their gun, sheriff saysNew Foto - Deputies shoot man who survived apparent gator attack and tried to steal their gun, sheriff says

A Florida man who was apparently bitten while swimming in alligator-infested waters Monday morning was fatally shot after officials said he emerged from the lake and charged at sheriff's deputies with garden shears. Two deputies, including a trainee, opened fire on Timothy Schulz, 42, after they deployed a stun gun that appeared to have no effect and after Schulz tried to remove a firearm from their patrol cruiser, Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd told reporters. "The fact that he was bitten by an alligator and still continued his rampage is shocking," Judd said. Authorities first responded to a call involving Schulz at 5:56 a.m., when he appeared at a racetrack shaking and asking to call his son, Judd said. Deputies who responded to the area could not find him, the sheriff said. Nearly two hours later, a witness spotted Schulz in Lakeland, south of Orlando, and reported that the man was in a lake with "a lot" of alligators, Judd said. "A witness actually took a life vest and tried to give it to him," he said. "He wouldn't take it." Another witness told authorities that Schulz growled when the person tried talking to him. The witnesses reported that Schulz was treading water and they could only see his head. At one point, an alligator appeared to bite his right arm, Judd said. After emerging from the lake, Schulz was seen walking between houses in a residential area, carrying a pair of garden shears. At one point he threw a brick at a truck, Judd said. As deputies arrived, Judd said, they saw Schulz apparently trying to break into a vehicle and quickly got out of their cruiser. When Schulz charged at them with the shears, Judd said, they ordered him to drop the tool, then deployed the stun gun when he did not. Schulz climbed into the passenger side of the deputies' patrol vehicle and appeared to try and remove a rifle or shotgun, Judd said. "At that time our deputies shot multiple times," Judd said. "As a result, Timothy is deceased." He said the deputies will remain on administrative leave while the shooting is reviewed by the state's attorney's office, per department policy. Judd said Schulz has faced several methamphetamine charges and was released from county jail most recently on May 20. An affidavit in that case shows that a deputy found a glass pipe inside a backpack Schulz was carrying that tested positive for the drug.

Deputies shoot man who survived apparent gator attack and tried to steal their gun, sheriff says

Deputies shoot man who survived apparent gator attack and tried to steal their gun, sheriff says A Florida man who was apparently bitten whi...
China accuses Taiwan of cyberattack on tech companyNew Foto - China accuses Taiwan of cyberattack on tech company

BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese public security authorities in the city of Guangzhou have attributed a cyberattack on an unnamed technology company to the Taiwan government, a statement showed on Tuesday. The foreign hacker organisation behind the attack was "supported by" Taiwan's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), authorities in the capital of Guangdong province said, based on an initial police investigation. The DPP is the ruling party in Taiwan. The Mainland Affairs Council in Taiwan did not immediately reply to a request for comment. (Reporting by Liz Lee and Shanghai newsroom; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Tom Hogue)

China accuses Taiwan of cyberattack on tech company

China accuses Taiwan of cyberattack on tech company BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese public security authorities in the city of Guangzhou have att...
Trump pardons former Virginia sheriff convicted of taking $75K in bribesNew Foto - Trump pardons former Virginia sheriff convicted of taking $75K in bribes

PresidentDonald Trumpon Monday announced that he will pardon a formerVirginia sheriffconvicted of taking more than $75,000 in bribes in exchange for appointing businessmen as auxiliary deputy sheriffs within his department. In a Truth Social post, Trump said Scott Howard Jenkins, 53, of Culpeper, Virginia, was supposed to report to jail Tuesday but "instead will have a wonderful and productive life." Jenkins, the former sheriff of Culpeper County, was convicted last year of one count of conspiracy, four counts of honest services fraud, and seven counts of bribery concerning programs receiving federal funds. He was sentenced in March to 10 years in prison. Jd Vance Spells Out What Trump's Process To 'Rectify' 'Unfair' Jan 6 Prosecutions Could Look Like In his post, Trump said the former sheriff and his wife have been "dragged through HELL by a Corrupt and Weaponized Biden"Justice Department. "In fact, during his trial, when Sheriff Jenkins tried to offer exculpatory evidence to support himself, the Biden Judge, Robert Ballou, refused to allow it, shut him down, and then went on a tirade,"Trump wrote. "As we have seen, in Federal, City, and State Courts, Radical Left or Liberal Judges allow into evidence what they feel like, not what is mandated under the Constitution and Rules of Evidence." Read On The Fox News App "This Sheriff is a victim of an overzealous Biden Department of Justice, and doesn't deserve to spend a single day in jail," he added. "He is a wonderful person, who was persecuted by the Radical Left 'monsters,' and 'left for dead.' This is why I, as President of the United States, see fit to end his unfair sentence, and grant Sheriff Jenkins a FULL and Unconditional Pardon." How My Jan. 6 Clients Were Robbed Of Fairness In Dc Bench Trials Federal prosecutors alleged Jenkins accepted cash bribes and bribes in the form of campaign contributions from co-defendants Rick Rahim, Fredric Gumbinner and James Metcalf, as well as at least five others, including two FBI undercover agents. In exchange, Jenkins appointed the people paying the bribes as auxiliary deputy sheriffs, a sworn law-enforcement position, and issued them official Culpeper County Sheriff's Office badges and credentials, authorities said. None of the payers were trained or vetted and did not render any legitimate services to the sheriff's office,prosecutors said. In April, Jenkins said he hoped that Trump would intervene in his case. "I truly believe if I could get an hour of time with someone in the administration and lay out some facts with my attorney and I really believe if they could hear the other side which I couldn't get in front of the jury — I believe wholeheartedly in the president," he said during a webinar hosted by the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association. "I believe if he heard the information, I know he would help if he knew my story." Original article source:Trump pardons former Virginia sheriff convicted of taking $75K in bribes

Trump pardons former Virginia sheriff convicted of taking $75K in bribes

Trump pardons former Virginia sheriff convicted of taking $75K in bribes PresidentDonald Trumpon Monday announced that he will pardon a form...

 

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