
Maine police officer arrested by ICE agrees to voluntarily leave the country
Follow
A Maine police officer arrested by immigration authorities has agreed to voluntarily leave the country, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said Monday.
ICE arrested Old Orchard Beach Police Department reserve Officer Jon Luke Evans, of Jamaica, on July 25, as part of the agency's effort to step up immigration enforcement. Officials with the town and police department have said federal authorities previously told them Evans was legally authorized to work in the U.S.
An ICE representative reached by telephone told The Associated Press on Monday that a judge has granted voluntary departure for Evans and that he could leave as soon as that day. The representative did not provide other details about Evans' case.
Evans' arrest touched off a dispute between Old Orchard Beach officials and ICE. Police Chief Elise Chard has said the department was notified by federal officials that Evans was legally permitted to work in the country, and that the town submitted information via the Department of Homeland Security's E-Verify program prior to Evans' employment. Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin then accused the town of 'reckless reliance' on the department's E-Verify program.
E-Verify is an online system that allows employers to check if potential employees can work legally in the U.S.
The town is aware of reports that Evans plans to leave the country voluntarily, Chard said Monday.
'The town reiterates its ongoing commitment to meeting all state and federal laws regarding employment,' Chard said in a statement. 'We will continue to rely on the I-9 Employment Eligibility Verification form and the E-Verify database to confirm employment eligibility.'
ICE's detainee lookup website said Monday that Evans was being held at the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility in Central Falls, Rhode Island. However, a representative for Wyatt said Evans had been transferred to an ICE facility in Burlington, Massachusetts. ICE officials did not respond to requests for comment on the discrepancy. It was unclear if Evans was represented by an attorney, and a message left for him at the detention facility was not returned.
ICE officials said in July that Evans overstayed his visa and unlawfully attempted to purchase a firearm. WMTW-TV reported Monday that Evans' agreement to a voluntary departure means he will be allowed to leave the U.S. at his own expense to avoid being deported.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bombshell texts reveal Jeanine Pirro is no fan of Sean Hannity, alleging he storms into the Oval Office ‘like he owns the place'
U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro once labelled her fellow Fox News anchor Sean Hannity an 'egomaniac' and bragged about helping President Donald Trump, according to newly-released bombshell text messages. Pirro is at the center of a lawsuit brought by the voting machine manufacturer Smartmatic against Fox, in which the former is seeking $2.7 billion in damages for what it alleges do the network's anchors spread falsehoods and conspiracy theories about its products in the aftermath of Trump's defeat to Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election. Fox settled a similar defamation lawsuit with Dominion Voting Systems in 2023 for $787.5 million but has insisted that Smartmatic's suit is without merit. 'The evidence shows that Smartmatic's business and reputation were badly suffering long before any claims by President Trump's lawyers on Fox News and that Smartmatic grossly inflated its damage claims to generate headlines and chill free speech,' the network said in a statement. 'Now, in the aftermath of Smartmatic's executives getting indicted for bribery charges, we are eager and ready to continue defending our press freedoms.' The texts gathered by the company concerning Pirro were released as part of an unredacted court filing on Tuesday and paint a fascinating picture of life behind the scenes at Fox. In one message sent by Pirro in September 2020 to Ronna McDaniel, the then-chair of the Republican National Committee, she bragged, 'I work so hard for the party across the country. I'm the Number 1 watched show on all news cable all weekend. I work so hard for the President and party.' In another message on October 27, she told a friend that Hannity had stormed into the Oval Office of the White House 'like he owns the place, throws his papers on the Pres desk and says, you don't mind if I use your private bathroom, and walks into bathroom within Oval and uses it.' She continued: '[He] Looks at me and says, I got to talk to him… It's all abt him, period. No one else matters.' Smartmatic also argues in its suit that Pirro served as an information conduit to Sidney Powell, the self-styled 'Kraken' attorney at the forefront of claims that Biden's victory at the polls was achieved by fraud, citing a message in which she encourages the lawyer to 'keep fighting.' The texts further reveal that Jerry Andrews, the producer of Pirro's show Justice with Judge Jeanine, warned her against making false claims about the election on air. 'You should be very careful with this stuff and protect yourself given the ongoing calls for evidence that has not materialized,' he told her. Pirro was then angered when Fox decided against running an episode on November 7 and wrote to Hannity: 'I'M TIRED OF THE CENSORSHIP AND I'M EMBARRASSED BY HOW THEY CALLED THIS ELECTION.' Hannity replied by observing: 'Fox News promoting u every 5 seconds. It's hilarious.' According to Smartmatic, Pirro otherwise acknowledged in a deposition that the 2020 election was not stolen, agreed that it had been 'fair and free' and that the company did nothing wrong. 'I believe that there's been no showing that Smartmatic engaged in any problems,' she said, according to the filing, which also quoted her as answering 'I do' when asked by the company's lawyers whether she believed Biden was 'legitimately elected.' Elsewhere, Pirro is seen complaining to the president's son Eric Trump that her ex-husband, Albert Pirro, was not initially granted a pardon by Trump over his tax evasion conviction and calling former New York City police commissioner Bernard Kerik, who was granted clemency, 'a selfish bastard,' writing to Kerik's girlfriend: 'I DON'T CARE [ABOUT] ANYONE ELSE.' Other Fox anchors mentioned in the suit include Jesse Watters, who texted his fellow presenter Greg Gutfeld in December 2020: 'Think about how incredible our ratings would be if Fox went ALL in on STOP THE STEAL.' More cautious was Bret Baier, who, according to the filing, messaged executive Jay Wallace accusing Maria Bartiromo of Fox Business of airing falsehoods and declaring: 'None of that is true as far as we can tell. We need to fact-check this crap.'


WIRED
11 minutes ago
- WIRED
Government Staffing Cuts Have Fueled an Ant-Smuggling Boom
Aug 20, 2025 6:30 AM 'It's getting out of hand,' one seller says. 'They realize the US market is a gold mine.' A pair of fire ant insects. Photograph:It's hard to keep track of all the ways that the United States has changed since Donald Trump returned to the White House in January. The nation's foreign aid programs have been destroyed, chaotic tariff policies have upended global trade, and press freedom has been repeatedly attacked. But there are also innumerable smaller shifts taking place and incrementally warping day-to-day life. One involves some of the country's tiniest inhabitants: ants. Sources tell WIRED that ant smugglers in the US have been emboldened by widespread government staffing cuts spearheaded by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. The United States Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, which operates a program to stop the smuggling of invertebrate pests, was hit especially hard. The agency later rehired some of the people let go, but a number of the country's best entomologists left for good. Inside the world of illicit wildlife trafficking, there's a growing assumption that nobody in government is paying attention. 'The illegal market rapidly has become much more aggressive because of the lack of enforcement,' says Armando Rosario-Lebrón, who spoke to WIRED in his personal capacity, but also previously cochaired the Federal Interagency Committee on Invasive Terrestrial Animals and Pathogens before leaving the government earlier this year. In a particularly turbulent moment in the United States, a rise in this kind of extremely niche and relatively harmless type of criminal activity could get lost. But if even a small percentage of the nonnative species of ants sold illegally get loose, it could have environmental, economic, and public health impacts. The US has already seen a variety of problems caused by invasive ants entering the country in previous decades, like the tawny crazy ant in Florida, which can form supercolonies inside homes that eat away electrical equipment. 'The invasiveness potential is off the charts,' Rosario-Lebrón says. 'It's just ridiculous.' USDA spokesperson Heather Curlett said in a statement that the agency's enforcement of federal plant pest regulations 'has not changed or diminished.' Antkeeping communities are usually pretty wholesome, driven by enthusiasts who have a keen, genuine interest in citizen science. In recent years, several prominent antkeeping creators have helped spike interest in the hobby. Most of the people involved have no criminal inclinations and many are very young. Rosario-Lebrón describes the typical ant vendor's customer base as 'children under 17.' They might not necessarily know that the USDA requires ant vendors to apply for permits to sell between states, so some buyers of illegal ants are doing so unintentionally. 'The parents don't know it's illegal. The kids don't know it's illegal,' says Rosario-Lebrón. The sellers, however, often do. WIRED spoke with several people involved in the black market ant trade, who asked to remain anonymous so they could speak freely about their knowledge of potentially illicit behavior. Some say they've witnessed a change in the smuggling ecosystem since the Trump administration began making steep cuts to the federal government, including the USDA. 'It's getting out of hand,' one seller says. 'They realize the US market is a gold mine.' These sellers do brisk business online. On mainstream platforms like Ebay, they often upcharge novice antkeepers, the same trafficker tells WIRED; more sophisticated hobbyists buy and sell on private Discord servers. 'Everyone on Discord has their respect towards each other about prices,' the trafficker says. They estimate an order that might go for roughly $350 on Discord could go for like $1,000 on eBay. Ebay's current policy on live animal sales prohibits the selling of ants, but according to tests performed by WIRED, it's easy to find a wide variety of species for sale on the platform, from common sights throughout the US like black carpenter ants, to more exotic fare like the slender twig ant, a stinging variety native to Mexico.(Ebay did not respond to requests for comment.) In recent months, several sellers have witnessed black market players become more ruthlessly competitive as they race to make the most money, attempting to sabotage rivals by tipping off law enforcement and even threatening them with violence. 'I've seen two guys threaten to shoot each other online,' says another seller, who is currently involved in a Discord server devoted to unregulated buying and selling. 'Over a children's hobby!' Several smugglers stressed that most black market sellers have a genuine love for antkeeping and try to handle their insects responsibly. But recently, they say, newer players have started to behave in a more reckless manner amid what they perceive as a lax regulatory environment with less oversight. In an effort to maximize profits, some dealers collect and sell large volumes of specimens. These vendors often procure their wares from the Sonoran Desert in Arizona, a hot spot for ant diversity that attracts collectors looking for species like leafcutter and honeypot ants, two types that tend to sell well because they have unique properties. 'It's going to start hurting the population,' the first seller told WIRED. 'You can't just take thousands of queens without causing issues.' Insect experts have watched the upheaval at the USDA and other federal agencies tasked with controlling pests with alarm. 'There's been a lot of cutting of the inspectors as part of the quote-unquote 'efficiency' moves from the government recently,' says Chris Stelzig, executive director of the Entomological Society of America. 'A reduced infrastructure to detect invasive species can be problematic.' Even prior to the recent cuts, some experts say there were problems with how the US enforced laws on insect trafficking across state lines. Carlos Blanco, an entomologist who recently retired from his role at the USDA and who spoke to WIRED in his personal capacity, says that bureaucratic disorganization has plagued the department for years. Blanco describes the rise of illicit ant sales as 'a headache we really tried to control,' but it was difficult to coordinate effectively between agencies. 'Some of these illegal vendors would laugh in our faces.' Before leaving the government during the layoffs this year, Rosario-Lebrón says he had to lobby hard for any attention to be paid to the ant smuggling issue, noting that he pushed to 'make a legal route so that we could have the kids find legal queens to buy online, and we started working really hard to permit people.' Queen ants, the reproductive females that lay all the eggs, are necessary for any colony's survival but are especially risky to transport, as letting an invasive queen loose in a new area means that it could establish a colony and displace native ants. 'We work to address all instances of noncompliance both from permit holders who fail to follow the terms and conditions of their permits and those who move plant pests without obtaining the proper permits,' says Curlett, the USDA spokesperson. 'We have the same number of entomology staff within the pest permitting unit as we did before.' But within the illicit ant-selling community, people say that the current permitting system has gotten harder to navigate and is contributing to the rise in illegal sales. One former black market ant seller says the main problem isn't that ant smuggling has radically changed since the cuts—'enforcement was always virtually nonexistent,' they explain—but rather that people who would ordinarily try to do things legally are now being discouraged from seeking out permits. 'Smuggling ants hasn't gotten easier from the cuts to federal services, trading ants across state borders legally has gotten harder,' they said. What has been affected: the 'permit process and trying to do things legally.' Ant smuggling is surprisingly big business around the world. This spring, two Belgian teenagers were apprehended in Kenya after attempting to smuggle 5,000 ants out of the country in test tubes in order to sell them abroad; they later pled guilty to 'wildlife piracy.' One of the US-based smugglers who spoke to WIRED says that they are able to order ants from Thailand, Vietnam, China, and parts of Europe on a regular basis without issue. Customs and Border Protection, which works with APHIS to monitor pests that enter the United States at international points of entry, 'has not seen any significant change in interceptions of ants this year' according to spokesperson Michael Mascari.


WIRED
11 minutes ago
- WIRED
How DOGE Set Up a Shadow X Account for a Government Agency
Aug 20, 2025 6:30 AM In February, DOGE affiliates at the SBA set up an X account and solicited whistleblower complaints. 'It's like having a crazy uncle who decides to be the cops,' a government auditor tells WIRED. Less than two weeks after Donald Park and Edward Coristine, two members of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), entered the Small Business Administration (SBA), a new account appeared on X: @DOGE_SBA. The SBA has had an official X account since 2010. It frequently posts updates and reshares posts from the agency's administrator, former Republican senator Kelly Loeffler. But according to documents obtained under a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request and shared exclusively with WIRED, it was a member of DOGE itself that started and ran the new X account. Not only did DOGE seemingly do so without involving the government workers who normally manage an agency's external communications, but in at least one case, they appeared to accept a complaint from a potential whistleblower over direct message. It is yet another example of how DOGE has operated as a seemingly separate and unaccountable body within government agencies. According to sources familiar with government operations, social media accounts, as well as other public-facing channels, have typically been managed by an agency's communications staff. An SBA social media manager, though, appeared to be completely unaware of the account. In an email on March 6, he emailed his colleagues with a link to the @DOGE_SBA X account, writing, 'How did I not see this before?' According to an email dated February 16, Park, one of the two DOGE operatives at SBA, appears to have set up the @DOGE_SBA account, receiving an email confirmation from X for adding a phone number, which was redacted, to their account. (After Musk purchased the company, he changed its policies to allow only premium subscribers to use two-factor identification via SMS.) On that same day, the account pinned a repost of one shared by the DOGE X account, asking the public for help identifying instances of waste, fraud, abuse. 'Please DM insight for reducing waste, fraud, and abuse, along with any helpful insights or awesome ideas, to the relevant DOGE affiliates,' the post read. A tab labeled 'Affiliates' on the DOGE X page lists 32 X accounts for the DOGE missions at various agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, the Social Security Administration, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the SBA, among others. 'Help us fight fraud, waste, and abuse to benefit US taxpayers and small businesses across America. DMs are open!' the DOGE_SBA account wrote in its first and only post, echoing DOGE's X account, which still regularly posts about how the so-called agency has been saving the government money by canceling contracts and services. Park, Coristine, the SBA, and its communications team did not respond to requests for comment. A former US government public affairs official, who spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity to protect their identity, says that it would be highly unusual for a government employee to be running any kind of front-facing social media account without the knowledge of the public affairs staff. 'Social media has always been sort of highly contested territory in government agencies. As it was becoming a bigger and bigger thing, more and more people wanted to use it, other people within a department would see it as a means of control,' they say. 'In terms of DOGE, we all saw DOGE come in and do things that they had no right to do.' There is also already an established way to report federal waste, fraud, and abuse within the SBA. Like nearly every government agency, the SBA has an Office of the Inspector General (OIG), which has the authority to investigate and audit SBA programs. But X direct messages contained in the documents obtained through the FOIA request show that at least one person did report possible instances of waste, fraud, and abuse to the @DOGE_SBA X account. In one message, a user reached out asking how they could report a former employer, claiming they had 'misused a PPP loan,' referring to the Paycheck Protection Program, which was offered to businesses at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. Instead of referring the user to the OIG, the @DOGE_SBA account told the user to 'report it here.' 'Imagine you have a crazy uncle and he says, 'I'm going to be the cops, send me your tips,'' says a government auditor who spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the press.' That's essentially what's going on here. The fact that they're getting these OIG complaints, there's no long-term accountability, there's no long- term vested interest in the success of whatever agency they're at.' Nikhel Sus, deputy chief counsel at Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), the nonprofit that submitted the FOIA request for the documents, claims that this behavior shows that 'DOGE is a freestanding entity within the government. It is completely unchecked. It's not subject to any oversight, including from within the agencies that reportedly are employing them or that they are detailed to.' CREW has submitted FOIA requests for correspondence on the X accounts created by DOGE for the Department of Education, the Environmental Protection Agency, the General Services Administration, Housing and Urban Development, the Internal Revenue Service, the Office of Personnel Management, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Social Security Administration, the State Department, and the Department of Agriculture. Only the SBA has responded with documents, and the SEC responded saying that there were no documents associated with the accounts to produce. 'Communications to and from the DOGE Team X accounts, the DOGE agency accounts, are federal records,' says Sus. 'They have to be preserved under the Federal Records Act, and they have to be made available to the public on FOIA.'