
Abby Phillip: Why does history have to be white-washed? Why can't it just be accurate?
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Gizmodo
a minute ago
- Gizmodo
MTG Has Heard About the Israeli Cyber Official Arrested for Alleged Child Sex Crimes, and She Isn't Happy
Marjorie Taylor Greene has weighed in on the recent arrest of a high-level Israeli official over alleged involvement in child sex crimes, adding to the Trump administration's headaches as it attempts to navigate the growing scandal. Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, a man who has been identified as a high-ranking member of Israel's National Cyber Directorate, was arrested recently in a sting operation in Las Vegas. The sting operation, which was jointly run by the FBI and local police, targeted child sex predators. New details about Alexandrovich's arrest have been reported over the past day. CBS affiliate KLAS has reported that Alexandrovich was in Las Vegas for the cybersecurity conference Blackhat, and that, during that time, he is alleged to have chatted online with a 'decoy'—an undercover cop posing as a 15-year-old girl—according to documents viewed by the news outlet. Using the dating app Pure, the two discussed meeting up for 'sexual contact,' the outlet says. Police told KLAS: 'The sexual contact included bringing a condom and taking the decoy to [a] 'Cirque du Soleil'' show. According to the report, Alexandrovich told police that he 'believed the girl he was chatting with was 18.' Identification of a high-level Israeli official ensnared in the operation has been bad enough, but things grew more complicated when Alexandrovich reportedly managed to get on a plane and fly back to Israel. On Tuesday, Greene blasted the U.S. State Department and seemed to insinuate that the government had not done enough to ensure that Alexandrovich was prosecuted. 'Would it be antisemitic to drag Netanyahu's Cyber Executive Director back and prosecute this pos to the full extent of the law and at the same time let Palestinian kids who had their limbs and bodies blown apart receive surgeries in America,' Green asked. Greene has been critical of the Israeli government, as well as critical of the U.S.'s support for Israel. Green went on: The most concerning question is when and how did America become so subservient to Israel that we immediately release a CHILD SEX PREDATOR after arrest, with a 100% locked up case with evidence, and let him off to fly back home to Israel?? Would we do that with a Mexican child sex predator? Chinese child sex predator? Any other country's child sex predator? There have been unsubstantiated internet rumors that the Trump administration intervened on behalf of Alexandrovich to allow him safe passage back to Israel. The government has denied these allegations. 'The Department of State is aware that Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, an Israeli citizen, was arrested in Las Vegas and given a court date for charges related to soliciting sex electronically from a minor,' the agency's Near East Division recently stated. 'He did not claim diplomatic immunity and was released by a state judge pending a court date. Any claims that the U.S. government intervened are false.' Greene's stances on Israel are representative of a broader fissure in the MAGA base that the Trump administration doesn't seem to know how to mend. MAGA has been pissed about a lot of things lately: the Jeffrey Epstein files (which, some people believe, are also Israel-related), the economy, and, now, many are increasingly pissed about the administration's undying support for the Netanyahu government as it destroys the Gazan population. It's unclear what will abate the anger. One thing is for sure, the administration's ongoing attempts to throw focus on some old scandal or a manufactured moral panic don't seem to be bearing much fruit.


Washington Post
2 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Alaska man gifted $22,000 motorcycle by Russian government after viral interview
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — An Alaska man might have walked away as the biggest winner of last week's high stakes summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Anchorage. He rode off with a new motorcycle, courtesy of the Russian government. Putin's delegation gifted Mark Warren, a retired fire inspector for the Municipality of Anchorage, a Ural Gear Up motorcycle with a sidecar, one week after a television crew's interview with Warren went viral in Russia. The motorcycle company, founded in 1941 in western Siberia, now assembles its bikes in Petropavlovsk, Kazakhstan, and distributes them through a team based in Woodinville, Washington.


CNN
2 minutes ago
- CNN
Nebraska's governor announces plan for an immigration detention center in a farming area in the state's southwest corner
Immigration Donald TrumpFacebookTweetLink Follow Nebraska Republican Gov. Jim Pillen announced plans Tuesday for an immigration detention center in a farming area in the state's southwest corner as President Donald Trump's administration races to expand the infrastructure necessary for increasing deportations. Pillen said he and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had agreed to use an existing minimum security prison work camp in rural McCook to house people awaiting deportation and being held for other immigration proceedings. 'This is about keeping Nebraskans – and Americans across our country – safe,' Pillen said in a statement. Pillen also announced he would order the Nebraska National Guard to provide administrative and logical support to Nebraska-based immigration agents. About 20 Guard soldiers will be involved. He also said the Nebraska State Patrol would sign an agreement that enables troopers to help federal immigration agents make arrests. The Trump administration is adding new detention facilities across the country to hold the growing number of immigrants it has arrested and accused of being in the country illegally. Older and newer US Immigration and Customs Enforcement centers were holding more than 56,000 immigrants in June, the most since 2019. The new and planned facilities include the remote detention center in the Florida Everglades known as 'Alligator Alcatraz,' which opened last month. It's designed to hold up to 3,000 detainees in temporary tent structures. When Trump toured it, he suggested it could be a model for future lockups nationwide. The Florida facility also been the subject of legal challenges by attorneys who allege violations of due process there, including the rights of detainees to meet with their attorneys, limited access to immigration courts and poor living conditions. Critics have been trying to stop further construction and operations until it comes into compliance with federal environmental laws. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced last week that his administration is preparing to open a second facility, dubbed 'Deportation Depot,' at a state prison in north Florida. It's expected to have 1,300 immigration beds, though that capacity could be expanded to 2,000, state officials said. Also last week, officials in the rural Tennessee town of Mason voted to approve agreements to turn a former prison into an immigration detention facility operated by a private company, despite loud objections from residents and activists during a contentious public meeting. And the Trump administration announced plans earlier this month for a 1,000-bed detention center in Indiana that would be dubbed 'Speedway Slammer,' prompting a backlash in the Midwestern state that hosts the Indianapolis 500 auto race. The Nebraska plan has already raised concerns. In a video posted to social media, state Sen. Megan Hunt, an independent, blasted a lack of transparency about plans for the detention center, citing her unfulfilled request to the governor and executive branch for emails and other records about plans to build the facility. She urged people to support local immigrant rights groups, and said any response by the Legislature would not come until next year – and only with enough support from lawmakers. 'The No. 1 thing we need to do is protect our neighbors, protect the people in our communities who are being targeted by these horrible people, these horrible organizations that are making choices to lock up, detain, disappear our neighbors and families and friends,' Hunt said.