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Video shows Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's ex-husband berating three Muslim women

Video shows Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's ex-husband berating three Muslim women

CNN05-04-2025

Three young Muslim women say they were praying in an empty parking spot at Avalon Mall in Alpharetta, Georgia, when they were interrupted by a man driving a Tesla Cybertruck who began hurling profanities and racist epithets at them. The man driving the Tesla, Georgia GOP representative Marjorie Taylor Greene's ex-husband Perry Greene, issued a public apology at a press conference.

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Staff sergeant defrauds regiment to buy cars and hair transplant
Staff sergeant defrauds regiment to buy cars and hair transplant

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time4 hours ago

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Staff sergeant defrauds regiment to buy cars and hair transplant

An Army staff sergeant who defrauded his regiment out of more than £330,000 to buy luxury cars, a hair transplant and 'adult services' has been jailed. Andrew Oakes, 39, used his position as financial systems administrator at the Catterick Garrison base in North Yorkshire to transfer £336,448 of public funds into his personal accounts. He used the funds to buy three Tesla cars, a Mini Cooper and a Nissan Qashqai, along with Apple products, a hair transplant and spent £16,500 on 'adult services'. He also paid off debts by writing cheques to himself and disguising the transactions by falsifying stubs in the names of legitimate suppliers, including a regimental accountant and tailoring company. Oakes appeared for sentence on Thursday at Teesside Crown Court after pleading guilty to three counts of fraud by false representation, fraud by abuse of a position of trust and acquiring criminal property between February 2021 and October 2024. He was jailed for three-and-a-half years. Prosecutor Tabitha Buck said the role as a financial systems administrator was given to 'trustworthy' personnel because it gave them restricted but 'significant' access to MoD funds. In August 2024, Oakes was quizzed by his military line manager after she uncovered 'multiple suspicious transactions in the system' and reported this to the Royal Military Police. It emerged the scam first got under way in February 2021 when Oakes falsified his bank statements to try to prove that he had £300,000 available to secure a mortgage for a property, claiming he had won the money in 'the army lottery'. Between July 2021 and April 2022, he created false local authority and utility documents to claim £1,584 of mileage allowance. It was in May 2024 that the deception originally came to light, by which time Oakes had written 28 government cheques to himself. The investigation was then passed on to MoD's Economic Crime Team. He was fraudulently taking 'extensive periods of leave' on compassionate and medical grounds claiming that a family member had died. Oakes took 66 medical-leave days and 12 on 'compassionate' grounds, which first 'raised a red flag' among his military bosses. His military line manager said she had been supportive and sympathetic towards Oakes due to the 'family bereavement' and his perceived personal circumstances, which gave rise to his request for leave on compassionate grounds. Oakes, who was representing himself in court, said: 'I just want to apologise to everyone I've hurt – family and the Army especially. I was in a very bad place, drinking a lot of alcohol.' He said he wasn't a 'stable' individual at the time, adding: 'I regret everything I've done.' Judge Nathan Adams said that Oakes had 'wholly abused' a position of trust, prestige and 'high responsibility' in which he was given 'significant' access to state defence funds. He added: 'The impact of your offending is not simply the financial loss to the public purse but also the reputational damage caused to the organisation as a while, to Catterick and your battalion. 'Those officers who supported you with your personal problems felt significantly betrayed when they found out what was really going on and it's had a significant impact on the morale of your battalion in Catterick.' Mr Adams acknowledged Oakes did have genuine personal issues at the time, including the breakdown of his relationship with his former partner, which led to a drink problem. Oakes, of Station Road, Winsford, Cheshire, received a three-and-a-half-year jail sentence but was told under the Government's early-release scheme he would serve less than half of that time behind bars before being released on licence. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

ICE breakout in New Jersey symptom of Democratic ‘chaos' across the country, local GOP leader says
ICE breakout in New Jersey symptom of Democratic ‘chaos' across the country, local GOP leader says

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time4 hours ago

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ICE breakout in New Jersey symptom of Democratic ‘chaos' across the country, local GOP leader says

While Newark Democratic Mayor Ras Baraka has blamed the Trump administration for a breakout Thursday night at a local ICE detention center, New Jersey GOP leader Kenny Gonzalez criticized Baraka and the Democratic Party, saying it has been sowing "chaos" across the country that emboldens criminal illegals and violent rioters. "It all started a few months ago here in New Jersey, when Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested for attempting to trespass into the facility and Congresswoman LaMonica McIver assaulting an ICE agent," Gonzalez told Fox News Digital. "This type of behavior from Democrat left-wing politicians tells the general public that it's OK to do these kinds of things." Four migrants escaped from the Delaney Hall ICE detention center in Newark Thursday evening after an apparent disturbance inside the building, a senior Homeland Security official confirmed to Fox News. Immigration attorney Mustafa Cetin told around 50 detainees at the facility pushed down a dormitory wall after becoming agitated when meals were delayed. Democrat Accuses Trump Of Unleashing 'Campaign Of Terror' On Illegals As La Riots Rage "It's about the food, and some of the detainees were getting aggressive, and it turned violent," Cetin said. Read On The Fox News App He added that his client reported the wall was "not very strong" and described detainees hanging bedsheets in what may have been an escape attempt. The client also said he smelled gas during the incident. To add to the chaos, at approximately 9 p.m., a group of protesters blocked an SUV from exiting an ancillary gate at Delaney Hall, forcing it to back into the facility. PIX11 News reported that the escapees were seen running near Turnpike 78 and Delancey Street. Ice Officers Assaulted During Raid That Nabbed 70 Illegal Immigrants At Meat Plant: Dhs The Department of Homeland Security identified the four escaped migrants on Friday as "public safety threats." The escaped detainees have been identified as Honduran nationals Franklin Norberto Bautista-Reyes and Joel Enrique Sandoval-Lopez and Colombian nationals Joan Sebastian Castaneda-Lozada and Andres Pineda-Mogollon. Bautista-Reyes was previously arrested for aggravated assault and terroristic threats. The incident comes just two days after McIver was indicted on three federal charges from a previous visit to Delaney Hall May 9. McIver was with Baraka and others during what was described as an oversight visit. Baraka was initially charged with trespassing, but the charge was later dropped. Blue City Joins La Chaos As Anti-ice Agitators Injure Officers In Violent Riots In response to the breakout, Baraka said his office was "concerned about reports of what has transpired at Delaney Hall this evening, ranging from withholding food and poor treatment, to uprising and escaped detainees." Baraka criticized the federal government, saying, "This entire situation lacks sufficient oversight of every basic detail, including local zoning laws and fundamental constitutional rights. "This is why city officials and our congressional delegation need to be allowed entry to observe and monitor and why private prisons pose a very real problem to our state and its Constitution," he added. "We demand immediate answers and clear communication with the GEO Group and the Department of Homeland Security. We must put an end to this chaos and not allow this operation to continue unchecked." Gonzalez, however, said Baraka and Democratic leaders across the country should bear the blame for the breakout. Mother Of Murdered Jogger Slams Rep. Crockett For Dismissing Migrant Crime Victims "The far left was inspired after what they saw a few days ago in LA, and they wanted to replicate the same thing here in New Jersey, and they followed the politician's lead," he said. "So, this just falls into their plan to sow up chaos to distract from what the Democrat Party has been doing nationally and what they've done here in Jersey over the last few years." Gonzalez said Baraka should bear particular blame for the situation, adding, "It's very dangerous what the mayor's doing." "That statement is just so dangerous," Gonzalez said. "To watch the videos of what went on yesterday that clearly show that unhinged protesters were interfering with the ICE agents that were on scene, showing that they were stopping transport vehicles from getting in and out of the facility. … The fact that Ras Baraka's response is to blame it on the federal government and the state is very, very, very dangerous and shows a lack of accountability." With more protests planned for the weekend, Gonzalez worries Newark may still not be in the clear. Patty Morin Calls Out Democrats For Downplaying Illegal Immigration: 'Mind-boggling' "We just pray that it doesn't get to the point where President Trump has to do what he did in LA by mobilizing the National Guard. We hope that we can get things under control," Gonzalez said. "Delaney Hall is definitely going to be a target of all those protests tomorrow. And we definitely don't want to see that." Gonzalez criticized Baraka and other Democratic leaders for having an ideology by which "they see the inmates as victims, and they see themselves as heroes for all of this grandstanding and obstructing that they've been doing. "The good news is they are the minority, and the majority of New Jerseyans are not very happy with what's going on," he noted. "It's time for Gov. [Phil] Murphy to allow law enforcement to do its job and stop what's going on over there, because we know the mayor's not going to do it." Democrats Cash In After Padilla Forcibly Removed From Trump Admin Press Conference Meanwhile, Abigail Jackson, White House spokeswoman, told Fox News Digital that "if Democrats had their way, criminal illegal aliens would always be roaming the streets of every American community." "The Trump Administration is committed to doing everything possible to Make America Safe Again, and DHS has brought in additional law enforcement partners to locate the escapees," she said. Baraka's office did not respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment by publication article source: ICE breakout in New Jersey symptom of Democratic 'chaos' across the country, local GOP leader says

A reluctant brawler, Mayor Bass takes direct aim at Trump over immigration raids
A reluctant brawler, Mayor Bass takes direct aim at Trump over immigration raids

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time5 hours ago

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A reluctant brawler, Mayor Bass takes direct aim at Trump over immigration raids

With Los Angeles reeling from immigration sweeps and unsettled by nightly clashes between protesters and police, Mayor Karen Bass was asked by a reporter: What she did she have to say to President Trump? Bass, standing before a bank of news cameras, did not hold back. "I want to tell him to stop the raids," she said. "I want to tell him that this is a city of immigrants. I want to tell him that if you want to devastate the economy of the city of Los Angeles, then attack the immigrant population." After taking office in 2022, L.A.'s 43rd mayor carefully avoided public disputes with other elected officials, instead highlighting her well-known penchant for collaboration and coalition-building. The high-profile Democrat, who spent a dozen years in Congress, largely steered clear of direct confrontation with Trump, responding diplomatically even as he attacked her over her handling of the Palisades fire earlier this year. Those days of tiptoeing around Trump, and avoiding head-to-head conflict, are over. Bass is now sparring with the president and his administration at a perilous moment for her city and possibly for democracy. At the same time, the tumultuous events of the past week have given her a crucial opportunity for a reset after the Palisades fire, recalibrating her public image while leading her city through another historic crisis. "Having two moments of crisis during the first six months of this year has really tested her mettle as mayor," said GOP political strategist Mike Madrid, a long-standing Trump critic. "I think it's fair to say she did not perform to expectations during the fires. I think she's considerably improved during the current situation." Since agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal authorities fanned out across the region, searching for undocumented immigrants at courthouses, car washes and Home Depot parking lots, Bass has accused Trump of creating a "terrible sense of fear" in her city. Bass said Trump is on track to waste more than $100 million on troops who were neither requested nor needed. On multiple occasions, she said Trump wrongly gave credit to the National Guard for bringing calm to downtown L.A. on Saturday, when those troops had not even arrived yet. In many ways, Trump has emerged as the ideal foil for a mayor who, for much of the past six months, had been on her back feet. In the immediate aftermath of the Palisades fire, which erupted when she was out of the country, Bass struggled to show a command of the details and was savaged by critics over what they viewed as her lack of leadership. Months later, she released a budget that called for the layoffs of 1,600 workers, drawing an outcry from labor leaders, youth advocates and many others. Bass has been quicker to respond this time around, announcing a nightly curfew for downtown, warning of consequences for those who vandalize or commit violence and spelling out the real-world impacts of the ICE arrests on her constituents. The pushback reached a crescendo on Thursday, when — with just a few hours notice — Bass assembled more than 100 people from religious, community, business and civic groups to denounce the raids. It made for a potent tableau: a multi-ethnic, multiracial crowd of Angelenos cheering on the mayor as she declared that "peace begins with ICE leaving Los Angeles." Bass said she had received reports of ICE agents entering hospitals, workers not showing up to their jobs, parents afraid to attend their own children's graduations. An immigrant rights advocate said Trump had brought cruelty and chaos to Los Angeles. A church pastor from Boyle Heights said his parishioners "feel hunted." Trump and his administration have disparaged Bass and her city since the raids began. Stephen Miller, the president's deputy chief of staff, accused Bass on X of using "the language of the insurrectionist mob" while discussing her city. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem called L.A. "a city of criminals" whose law breakers have been protected by Bass. Republicans have begun threatening reprisals against outspoken Democrats, including Bass, with some hinting at criminal prosecution. Asked about Bass' comments over the past week, White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said ICE agents would not be "deterred from carrying out their mission." "We will not apologize for enforcing immigration law and carrying out the mandate the American people gave President Trump in November: Deport illegal aliens," she said. Fernando Guerra, who heads the Center for the Study of Los Angeles at Loyola Marymount University, said Angelenos fully expect their mayor to confront the president head on. Democrat Kamala Harris secured more than 70% of the vote in L.A. during last year's presidential election, while Trump received less than 27%. "I'm not surprised by what she's doing," Guerra said. "I would even suggest she push a little more. I don't think there's a cost to her politically, or even socially, to taking on Trump." The mayor is regularly calling in to TV and radio stations, as well as securing prime-time hits on national cable shows. In appearance after appearance, she has warned that L.A. is becoming "a grand experiment" — a testing ground for Trump to see if he can usurp the authority of Democratic mayors or governors in other states. On Tuesday, while addressing troops at Fort Bragg, Trump described L.A. as "a trash heap," with entire neighborhoods being controlled by "transnational gangs and criminal networks." Hours later, Bass clapped back on MSNBC, saying: "I have no idea what he's talking about." Bass has spoken repeatedly about traumatized Angelenos who could not locate loved ones caught up in the ICE raids. "For the most part, the people that have been detained have been denied access to legal representation," Bass said during an appearance at the city's Emergency Operations Center. "This is unprecedented." The raids, and their impact on families and children, are deeply personal for a mayor who cut her teeth organizing with immigrant rights activists decades ago. Bass' own family reflects the multiethnic nature of her city. Her late ex-husband was the son of immigrants from Chihuahua, Mexico. Her extended family includes immigrants from Korea, Japan and the Philippines. Immigration agents were recently seen making arrests outside her grandson's Los Angeles school, she said. The arrival of ICE, then the National Guard, then the U.S. Marines has caused not just Bass but several other Democrats to step out in ways they might have previously avoided. U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, a soft-spoken political figure for decades, was handcuffed and forcibly removed from a news conference in Westwood on Thursday after interrupting Noem's remarks. Gov. Gavin Newsom recently accused Trump of a "brazen abuse of power," calling him "unhinged" and filing a lawsuit to block the deployment of the National Guard — not a huge departure for Newsom, who relishes both confrontation and the spotlight. Head-to-head accusations are much more out of character for Bass, who spent her first two years at City Hall boasting of her success in "locking arms" with her fellow elected officials on homelessness and other issues. In recent months, the mayor has praised Trump for the speedy arrival of federal resources as the city began cleaning up and rebuilding from the Palisades fire. Long before winning city office, Bass prided herself on her ability to work with other politicians, regardless of party affiliation, from her early days as a co-founder of the South L.A.-based Community Coalition to her years in Congress. Bass' strategy of avoiding public spats with Trump during the first few months of his administration was no accident, according to someone with knowledge of her thinking who was not authorized to speak publicly. The mayor, that person said, viewed an extended tit-for-tat as an impediment to securing federal funding for wildfire relief and other urgent needs. "That's more her brand — to get things done with whoever she needs to get them done with," said Ange-Marie Hancock, who leads Ohio State University's Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity. Mike Bonin, who heads the Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs at Cal State L.A., said he thinks that Bass' career of building multiracial, multiethnic coalitions makes her uniquely suited to the moment. Now that Trump has "all but declared war on Los Angeles," Bass has no choice but to punch back, said Bonin, who served on the City Council for nearly a decade. "I don't see that she had any political or moral alternative," he said. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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