
ICE on Campus
Hamed Aleaziz, who covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy in the United States for The New York Times. Image A protest in Times Square after the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, a pro-Palestinian activist, at Columbia University. Credit... Eduardo Munoz/Reuters
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Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump White House Hires Harvard Law Review ‘Whistleblower'
A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM's Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version. The remarkable reporting by the NYT that the Trump White House hired a disgruntled Harvard Law student who was also serving as a would-be 'whistleblower' in the Justice Department's investigation of the law review is a little hard to follow, but a quick timeline helps to bring it into better focus. Briefly, the Trump DOJ 'appeared eager,' as the Times put it, to escalate its bogus civil investigation of the Harvard Law Review for allegedly discriminating against white men into a criminal probe with allegations of obstruction of justice. Even though the law review is independent of the university, top DOJ civil rights officials tried to use the investigation to put added pressure on Harvard as part of its broader attack on the school, the NYT reports, relying on previously unreported letters. Those letters disclosed that the government had a cooperating witness on the law review. The witness is Daniel Wasserman, who is now working under Stephen Miller, deputy chief of staff for policy. Here's the timeline culled from the NYT piece: April 25: Wasserman is offered a job at the White House, the same day the conservative Washington Free Beacon publishes a story with the headline: 'Exclusive: Internal Documents Reveal Pervasive Pattern of Racial Discrimination at Harvard Law Review' April 28: The Departments of Education and Health and Human Services announce a civil rights investigation citing the Washington Free Beacon story. May 13: The first Trump DOJ letter is sent to Harvard regarding the law review allegations. May 21: In the second letter to Harvard, the Trump DOJ first discloses that Wasserman was providing information to the government and accuses the law review of retaliating against him and ordering him to destroy evidence. May 22: Wasserman's first day of work at the White House May 23: The third Trump DOJ letter is sent to to Harvard regarding the law review. May 28: Wasserman graduates from Harvard Law School. A senior administration official told the Times that Wasserman's hiring was unrelated to the government investigation and that Miller was not involved in hiring him and did not meet him until he started working at the White House. 'Legal experts said it was highly unusual for an administration to give a cooperating witness in an ongoing investigation a White House job.'–the NYT, on the Trump White House's hiring of Daniel Wasserman 'The Trump administration failed on Monday in its effort to avert a trial next month to determine whether a federal judge should block the government from retaliating against pro-Palestinian students based on speech,' All Rise News reports. Abrego Garcia: In a new filing opposing the Trump administration's motion to dismiss the case, the lawyers for the wrongfully deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia framed up the stakes starkly: 'The Government asks this Court to accept a shocking proposition: that federal officers may snatch residents of this country and deposit them in foreign prisons in admitted violation of federal law, while no court in the United States has jurisdiction to do anything about it.' South Sudan: In the third country deportations case out of Massachusetts, the Trump administration told the court that the eight detainees who were originally bound for South Sudan remain in Djibouti and that DHS has provided Microsoft Teams, a satellite phone, and a private interview room for the detainees to speak with their attorneys. Cristian: Two related developments in the Maryland case of the wrongfully deported Cristian: His lawyers took the judge's invitation and in a new filing say they are likely to file a motion for contempt of court and other sanctions against the Trump administration for 'blatant violations' of the court's orders. As a prelude to that move, they are asking U.S. District Judge Stephanie Gallagher to order expedited discovery similar to that undertaken in the Abrego Garcia case. The Trump administration attempted to cure last week's violation of the judge's order by filing an updated declaration by an ICE official on the steps the government has and will take to facilitate Cristian's return. The updated declaration is still remarkably thin and not based on personal knowledge of the government's actions, as the judge ordered. It also appears to be an attempt to place the entire case more firmly in the foreign policy realm and out of the reach of the judiciary by highlighting Secretary of State Marco Rubio's personal involvement in 'handling the discussions' with the government of El Salvador: Greg Sargent interviewed an at times tearful Carol Hui, the woman originally from Hong Kong whose detention by the Trump administration shocked the deep-red Missouri town where she has lived and worked for 20 years. The Trump administration's use of state power to target minorities and marginalized groups continues apace, but it's almost become background noise in the Trump II presidency. A few examples from just the past 24 hours: In a little-noticed memo in March, the Trump administration ordered federal border agents and customs officers not to attend events hosted by organizations that support women or minority groups in law enforcement, a senior border official who retired over the policy told the NYT. Harmeet K. Dhillon, the assistant attorney general for civil rights, sent a letter Monday to public school districts in California threatening legal action if they continue to allow trans athletes to compete in high school sports. On what is clearly a pretextual basis, the National Park Service has denied next weekend's WorldPride celebration access to D.C.'s Dupont Circle park, which is the center of the city's historic LGBTQ+ neighborhood. The new acting chief of the Trump DOJ's voting section is Maureen Riordan, who until recently was a lawyer for the Public Interest Legal Foundation, Democracy Docket reports. PILF has been a leading group in the voter fraud bamboozlement movement and has succeeded in purging voter roles, introducing new voter restrictions, and limiting the reach of voting rights laws. Voter suppression luminaries Hans von Spakovsky, J. Christian Adam, and John Eastman either are or have been associated with the group. FEMA: Acting FEMA Director David Richardson – in the role since May, when the previous director was forced out for defending FEMA's existence before Congress – told his staff Monday that he didn't know there was a hurricane season, remarks a FEMA spokesperson dismissed as meant to be a joke. NWS: After downsizing some 600 workers, decimating its operational capabilities, the National Weather Service is now planning to hire 100 new people. Forest Service: Tech billionaire Michael Boren is alleged to have built an airstrip on protected land without a permit, flown a helicopter dangerously close to a crew building a Forest Service trail, and constructed a cabin on federal property. Today the Senate Agriculture Committee holds a hearing on his confirmation to be the under secretary of agriculture for natural resources and environment, which oversees the Forest Service. Under new FTC chairman Andrew Ferguson, the commission is continuing the bogus right-wing crusade against censorship of conservatives on social media by targeting watchdog groups and other organizations in a new investigation into whether they improperly colluded by coordinating boycotts among advertisers. Among the targeted groups are Media Matters, Ad Fontes Media, and at least a dozen other groups, the NYT reports. The FTC's letters of inquiry into the internal operations of the groups and their business practices. In a symbolic but aggressive move, the Pentagon under Donald Trump is preparing to shift Greenland from the jurisdiction of the European Command to U.S. Northern Command. The former Yale historian, with some reluctance, wades into the public discourse around his decision to leave New Haven for Toronto: Last Year's Move to Toronto by Timothy Snyder And This Year's Politics (video and commentary) Read on Substack

Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Mourners pray, victims taken to hospital after Israel kills at least 27 people near Gaza aid site
Palestinian health officials and witnesses say Israeli forces fired on people as they headed toward an aid distribution site on Tuesday, killing at least 27, in the third such incident in three days. AP Production by Wafaa Shurafa
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Israel admits firing towards Gazans near US aid centre
Israel has admitted firing 'near' civilians in the vicinity of a Gazan aid centre after 27 people were reportedly killed. The shooting on Tuesday morning is the third in as many days fuelling mounting criticism of Israel's controversial new aid delivery system. On Sunday, more than 30 people died in a similar incident. Witnesses reported civilians being shot from quad-copter drones near the distribution hub, run by American contractors, in the Rafah area of southern Gaza. An Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman said 'suspects' had ventured towards troops less than a third of a mile from the hub, prompting them to fire warning shots. He said that 'after the suspects failed to retreat, the additional shots were fired towards a few individual suspects who advanced towards the troops'. He added: 'The IDF is aware of reports regarding casualties, and the details of the incident are being looked into.' The International Committee of the Red Cross said its Rafah field hospital had received 165 wounded people, eight of whom later died from their wounds. The hospital also received 19 people who were declared dead on entry. The 27 bodies were transferred to the Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, run by the Hamas-controlled Gaza health ministry, which said they had been killed on Tuesday morning. Volker Turk, the UN's human rights chief, said the deadly attacks on civilians around aid distribution sites constituted a 'war crime'. The UN, which used to deliver aid to community pick-up points until access was blocked in early March, will not collaborate with the new system because it claims it breaches humanitarian principles. Israel has strongly attacked recent UN criticism of the aid scheme, accusing it of failing to condemn Hamas sufficiently. There are now four distribution centres run by the Gaza Heath Foundation (GHF) in the largely devastated south of the Strip. The government claimed the new method of distribution was to stop aid being stolen by the terror group. The humanitarian concerns come after Hamas supporters released a video appearing to show a man being savagely tortured for allegedly stealing food, as the group seeks to retain control of the civilian population. Yasser Abu Lubda, a 50-year-old displaced Palestinian from Rafah, said the Tuesday's shooting started in the city's Flag Roundabout area, around one kilometre away from the aid distribution hub, at around 4am. He said he saw several people killed or wounded. Neima al-Aaraj, a woman from Khan Younis, gave a similar account. 'There were many martyrs and wounded,' she said, saying the shooting by Israeli forces was 'indiscriminate'. She said she managed to reach the hub but returned empty-handed, adding: 'There was no aid there. I won't return. Either way we will die.' Rasha al-Nahal, another witness, said that 'there was gunfire from all directions'. She said she counted more than a dozen dead and several wounded along the road. She also found no aid when she arrived at the distribution hub and that Israeli forces 'fired at us as we were returning'. Speaking about Sunday's shooting, a witness, who did not want to be named, said that quad-copter drones had been used to tell Palestinians via loudspeakers to turn back because they had approached the aid site at the wrong time. Mohammed al-Shaer, a 44-year-old witness, said: 'A helicopter and quad-copters started firing at the crowd to prevent them from approaching the tank barrier. There were injuries and deaths. I didn't reach the centre, and we didn't get any food.' The army said it was 'not preventing the arrival of Gazan civilians to the humanitarian aid distribution sites' and described the reports of deaths on Sunday as 'fabrications' by Hamas. GHF said the operations at its site went ahead safely on Tuesday, but added it was aware the military 'is investigating whether a number of civilians were injured after moving beyond the designated safe corridor and into a closed military zone'. 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.