
Why Trump will patrol DC with police tonight
The planned outing was not listed on the president's public schedule, with White House officials indicating details were forthcoming.
The federal operation in D.C. has low public support, with a recent survey showing approximately 80% of residents oppose the takeover.
City officials have resisted the federal intervention; Attorney General Pam Bondi returned control of the D.C. police to its chief after the city sued Trump.
Vice President JD Vance and the Defense Secretary encountered boos and chants of 'free D.C.' during a visit to National Guard troops deployed in the city.
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Metro
18 minutes ago
- Metro
Trump administration reviewing 55,000,000 foreigners with visas for deportations
The Trump administration has started to review all 55million legal immigrants who hold US visas to see if they should be deported. US visa holders including tourists from around the world are under 'continuous vetting' for violations that could led to deportations, said the State Department on Thursday. 'We review all available information as part of our vetting, including law enforcement or immigration records or any other information that comes to light after visa issuance indicating a potential ineligibility,' stated the department said. The State Department is prepared to revoke visas of any individuals who have violated their terms. Officials are searching for visa holders who have exceeded their allowed stay, have committed criminal offenses, posed a threat to safety, and been involved in or support terrorist groups. The review includes looking at visa holders' law enforcement and immigration records in their mother countries, and even watching their social media accounts. Earlier this year, applicants were required to set their social media accounts to public when going for a visa interview. It is part of the Trump administration's push to heighten requirements and restrictions on applicants. Officials are using new tools to compile data on applicants of all statuses, including screening their social media profiles. 'As part of the Trump Administration's commitment to protect US national security and public safety, since Inauguration Day the State Department has revoked more than twice as many visas, including nearly four times as many student visas, as during the same time period last year,' the State Department said. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Vladimir Putin 'reveals his three demands' that will end Russia's invasion of Ukraine MORE: Mystery as six people found dead at a dairy MORE: Mum-of-three who ran Burger King restaurant all by herself gets fired


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Bryan Kohberger files reveal café worker's eerie encounters with Idaho killer before student murders
A woman who worked in a local café in Pullman, Washington, had a string of eerie encounters with Bryan Kohberger around the time that he slaughtered four University of Idaho students. The coffee shop employee told investigators Kohberger would visit her place of work every day during the fall 2022 semester - often around closing time - and somehow managed to find out her name and shift pattern. Her encounters with the criminology PhD student left her so unnerved that she confided in a colleague and actively tried to avoid him when he visited. It was also around this time that 'weird things' started happening at her home. Newly-released police records reveal the worker came forward to share her creepy experience with the mass killer following his arrest for the November 13, 2022, murders just over the state border in Moscow, Idaho. More than 500 pages of documents were unsealed by Idaho State Police this week, after the 30-year-old PhD student pleaded guilty on July 2 to breaking into a student home and stabbing Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin to death. Kohberger was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole on July 23 and is now serving his sentence inside Idaho's maximum security prison in Kuna. The new trove of documents includes interviews with witnesses and the victims' friends, tips explored by police before Kohberger was on law enforcement's radar, and chilling fears that the students at 1122 King Road were being stalked in the weeks leading up to the slayings. The documents also reveal multiple accounts from witnesses who had brushes with Kohberger around the time of the murders, including several classmates and professors at Washington State University (WSU). Many of the witnesses described Kohberger as sexist and creepy - with one faculty member even warning he had the potential to become a 'future rapist'. On January 17, 2023 - days after Kohberger's December 30, 2022, arrest in Pennsylvania - the cafe worker shared her own experiences with the mass killer in an interview with police. The woman's name and place of work is redacted in the records but they reveal she lived in Pullman, like Kohberger, and was a student on the psychology program at WSU. In her interview with police, the woman said Kohberger began coming into the café sometimes over the summer before the start of the semester. Then, it became a daily occurrence. During his visits, she found he liked to 'talk specifically with her' and would ask her questions about her school program and psychology, the records show. When he asked about the psychological assessments she was learning about, she said she told him she wasn't interested in that area of study. The woman was certain she never gave Kohberger her name and the staff didn't wear name tags identifying them. Kohberger gave a name to her, however - though it is unclear what name he gave as the word is redacted in the documents. On one occasion, the woman said Kohberger had gone into the café when she wasn't there and asked for her by name. 'She was unaware how he knew her name. It seemed to her Kohberger knew what hours she worked and made remarks about her hours,' investigators wrote in the report. The criminology PhD student would sometimes come in with a female friend and, on one visit, the café worker said she had asked the woman where she was from. When the employee guessed correctly, Kohberger told his friend: 'See I told you she was smart.' The woman told police his comment 'seemed weird to her, because she didn't think much of Kohberger, but it seemed like he had been talking to the female about her'. The woman was 'always uninterested' in talking with Kohberger and would try to walk away but he would continue talking to her, according to the police report. The woman said she was so uncomfortable around him that a coworker would let her know when he came in so she could avoid him. But the creepy encounters didn't only happen in her workplace, the woman told police. Around that time, the woman described two incidents at her home in Pullman in August or September. On one occasion, the woman told police she was home alone at night and was changing in her room, when she heard someone knock on her window. On another occasion, at around 7pm, she heard someone moving around on her porch. The incidents spooked the woman so much that she called her husband who rushed home from work, the police records show. When he arrived home that second time, her husband saw a white car leaving the area, she told police. It is not clear if the creepy incidents at her home were connected to Kohberger. However, Kohberger drove a white Hyundai Elantra. And the woman's story echoes the chilling accounts of other women who crossed Kohberger's path during that time and believed they were being watched or followed - as well as the accounts of his victims. One WSU faculty member told investigators she feared Kohberger had been stalking people after one student revealed her home had been broken into and her perfume and underwear stolen a month before the killings, the police records show. According to police interviews with survivors and friends, the students at 1122 King Road had also seen a man lurking in the trees outside their home and noticed a string of bizarre incidents at their home in the weeks before the murders. Around one month earlier, Goncalves had told multiple people including surviving roommates Dylan Mortensen and Bethany Funke and her ex-boyfriend Jack DuCoeur that she had seen a man watching her in the trees around the home when she took her pet dog Murphy outside, previously-unsealed Moscow Police records show. Friends also recalled multiple occasions when, during parties at the home, Goncalves' dog Murphy would run barking into the tree line and wouldn't return when he was called. This was out of character for the dog, they said. On November 4, 2022 - just nine days before the murders - the roommates had come home to find the door to their three-story house open. Funke said that they had grabbed golf clubs and gone room to room, thinking there was an intruder. Goncalves had also mentioned someone following her around two or three weeks before her murder. Around that same time, a female student living on Queen Road - close to the King Road home - said a man tried to break into her home but the door was locked. Evidence indicates Kohberger was watching the home in the lead-up to the murders. From July 2022 through to November 13, 2022, Kohberger's phone placed him in the vicinity of the King Road home at least 23 times, mostly at night. Investigators have said Kohberger targeted 1122 King Road but that they don't know who he was targeting inside the home. The killer's motive for the attack also remains a mystery and no connection has ever been found between Kohberger and his victims. However, the disturbing encounters with the coffee shop worker shines new light on a theory that he may have met one or more of the victims in passing at their place of work. Mogen and Kernodle both worked as servers at the Mad Greek, a vegan restaurant in Moscow. While investigators have been unable to confirm whether or not Kohberger - a vegan - ever visited the restaurant, a former employee previously told People they remembered him stopping by at least twice. And now, the Daily Mail has learned that digital evidence does indicate some link between Kohberger and the Mad Greek. Heather Barnhart, Senior Director of Forensic Research at Cellebrite, and Jared Barnhart, Head of CX Strategy and Advocacy at Cellebrite, were hired by state prosecutors to dig into Kohberger's Android cell phone and laptop and were set to testify as expert witnesses in his capital murder trial. Through their analysis, the team found some trace of the Mad Greek on his devices. Heather explained that it was 'a passive assist file associated with Google Maps' for the Mad Greek. 'What we think it means is if you open your phone and you go to Google Maps and you look at restaurants in a specific area and it shows up as a recommendation,' she told the Daily Mail. The data does not show how the file was created and does not have a date attached to it, meaning it is not possible to determine if Kohberger actively searched for the restaurant, she said. 'This is one of those where the jury would have had to decide the weight to assign to it,' she said. The Cellebrite team found Kohberger had gone to extreme lengths to try to delete and hide his digital footprint using VPNs, incognito modes and clearing his browsing history. Had he not done so, Jared said he believes some connection to the victims would have been found. 'If nothing was erased, I think that we probably would have found the connection or some method or research or something ahead of time to prove he was planning this,' he told the Daily Mail. But Kohberger avoided any of this evidence being presented at trial by striking an 11th-hour plea deal with prosecutors to avoid the death penalty. Under the terms of the deal, he pleaded guilty to all charges and waived his right to appeal. On July 23, he was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole. He is now being held inside Idaho's maximum security prison where he has already filed multiple complaints about his fellow inmates.


Reuters
19 minutes ago
- Reuters
US halts worker visas for commercial truck drivers, Rubio says
WASHINGTON, Aug 21 (Reuters) - The United States is immediately pausing the issuance of all worker visas for commercial truck drivers, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Thursday. "The increasing number of foreign drivers operating large tractor-trailer trucks on U.S. roads is endangering American lives and undercutting the livelihoods of American truckers," Rubio said in a post on X. The administration of President Donald Trump has taken a series of steps to address concerns about foreign truck drivers who do not speak English. Trump in April signed an executive order directing enforcement of a rule requiring commercial drivers in the U.S. to meet English-proficiency standards. Earlier this week, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has launched an investigation into a crash on a Florida highway that killed three people. The crash involved a driver who was an Indian national and did not speak English or have legal authorization to be in the United States, according to Florida and U.S. officials. Harjinder Singh has been charged with three counts of vehicular homicide and police said he attempted to make an illegal U-turn through an 'Official Use Only' access point blocking traffic and causing the fatal crash that resulted in the deaths of three people in a minivan that struck the truck. Florida officials took custody of Singh in California to return him to the state to face charges. A lawyer for Singh could not immediately be identified. While the English-proficiency standard for truckers was already longstanding U.S. law, Trump's executive order in April reversed 2016 guidance that inspectors not place commercial drivers out of service if their only violation was lack of English. Duffy has said that failing to adequately enforce driver qualification standards poses serious safety concerns and increases the likelihood of crashes. FMCSA said in 2023 that about 16% of U.S. truck drivers were born outside the United States. Last month, Reuters reported that Mexican truck drivers in the border city of Ciudad Juarez have begun studying English in efforts to comply with the Trump order.