
ICE raids are leaving some L.A. cats and dogs homeless
The SPAY(CE) Project, which spays and neuters dogs in underserved areas, put out a call on Instagram to help Chuco and an animal rescue group agreed to take him, but then went quiet. Meanwhile, the garage owner took Chuco to an undisclosed shelter.
After repeated attempts, SPAY(CE) co-founder Esther Ruurda said her nonprofit gave up on finding the dog or a home for him, since 'no one has space for an adult male Pittie these days.' So 'the poor dog is left to die in the shelter.'
It's not an isolated incident. Since federal immigration raids, primarily targeting Latino communities, began roiling Los Angeles in early June, animal rescues and care providers across the county are hearing desperate pleas for help.
At least 15 dogs were surrendered at L.A. County animal shelters due to deportations between June 10 and July 4, according to the county's Department of Animal Care and Control.
Pets belonging to people who are deported or flee are being left in empty apartments, dumped into the laps of unprepared friends and dropped off at overcrowded shelters, The Times found.
'Unless people do take the initiative [and get the pets out], those animals will starve to death in those backyards or those homes,' said Yvette Berke, outreach manager for Cats at the Studios, a rescue that serves L.A.
Yet with many animal refuges operating at capacity, it can be difficult to find temporary homes where pets are not at risk of euthanasia.
Fearing arrest if they go outside, some people are also forgoing healthcare for their pets, with clinics reporting a surge in no-shows and missed appointments in communities affected by the raids.
'Pets are like the collateral damage to the current political climate,' said Jennifer Naitaki, vice president of programs and strategic initiatives at the Michelson Found Animals Foundation.
With shelters and rescues stuffed to the gills, an influx of pets is 'another impact to an already stressed system,' Berke said.
Dogs — large ones in particular — can be hard to find homes for, some rescues said. Data show that two county shelters have seen large jumps in dogs being surrendered by their owners.
The numbers of dogs relinquished at L.A. County's Palmdale shelter more than doubled in June compared with June of last year, according to data obtained by The Times. At the county's Downey shelter, the count jumped by roughly 50% over the same period.
Some of this increase could be because of a loosening of requirements for giving up a pet, said Christopher Valles with L.A. County's animal control department. In April the department eliminated a requirement that people must make an appointment to relinquish a pet.
There's no set time limit on when an animal must be adopted to avoid euthanizing, said Valles, adding that behavior or illness can make them a candidate for being put to sleep.
And there are resources for people in the deported person's network who are willing to take on the responsibility for their pets, like 2-year-old Mocha, a female chocolate Labrador retriever who was brought in to the county's Baldwin Park shelter in late June and is ready for adoption.
'We stand by anybody who's in a difficult position where they can't care for their animal because of deportation,' Valles said.
Some rescues, however, urge people not to turn to shelters because of overcrowding and high euthanasia rates.
Rates for dogs getting put down at L.A. city shelters increased 57% in April compared with the same month the previous year, according to a recent report.
L.A. Animal Services, which oversees city shelters, did not respond to requests for comment or data.
Every day, Fabienne Origer is bombarded with 10 to 20 calls asking if AGWC Rockin' Rescue in Woodland Hills, which she manages, can take in dogs and cats. She estimates that one to two of those pleas are now related to immigration issues.
The rescue, like many others, is full.
Part of the reason is that many people adopted pets during the COVID-19 crisis — when they were stuck at home — and dumped them when the world opened back up, she said.
Skyrocketing cost of living and veterinary care expenses have also prompted people to get rid of their pet family members, several rescues said. Vet prices have surged by 60% over a decade.
L.A. Animal Services reported 'critical overcrowding' in May, with more than 900 dogs in its custody.
'It's already bad, but now on top of that, a lot of requests are because people have disappeared, because people have been deported, and if we can take a cat or two dogs,' Origer said. 'It's just ongoing, every single day.'
Animals suffer from the emotional strain of separation and unceremonious change when their owners vanish, experts said.
When a mother and three young daughters from Nicaragua who were pursuing asylum in the U.S. were unexpectedly deported in May following a routine hearing, they left behind their beloved senior dog.
She was taken in by the mother's stepmom. Not long after, the small dog had to be ushered into surgery to treat a life-threatening mass.
The small dog is on the mend physically, but 'is clearly depressed, barely functioning and missing her family,' the stepmother wrote in a statement provided to the Community Animal Medicine Project (CAMP), which paid for the surgery. She's used to spending all day with the girls and sleeping with them at night, the stepmom said.
From Nicaragua, the girls have been asking to get their dog back. For now, they're using FaceTime.
Prior to the ICE raids, 80 to 100 people often lined up for services at clinics run by the Latino Alliance for Animal Care Foundation.
Now such a line could draw attention, so the Alliance staggers appointments, according to Jose Sandoval, executive director of the Panorama City-based organization that provides education and services to Latino families.
'It's hitting our 'hood,' Sandoval said, 'and we couldn't just sit there and not do anything.'
Within two hours of offering free services — including vaccines and flea medication refills — to people affected by ICE raids, they received about 15 calls.
CAMP, whose staff is almost entirely people of color and Spanish speaking, is mulling reviving telehealth options and partnering to deliver baskets of urgently needed pet goods. It's drilling staffers on what to do if immigration officers show up at the workplace.
'Humans aren't leaving their house for themselves, so if their dog has an earache they may hesitate to go out to their vet, but animals will suffer,' said Alanna Klein, strategy and engagement officer for CAMP. 'We totally understand why they're not doing it, but [pets] are alongside humans in being impacted by this.'
CAMP has seen a 20%-30% increase in missed appointments since the first week of June, for everything from spay and neuter to wellness exams to surgical procedures. After a video of an ICE raid at a car dealership near CAMP's clinic in Mission Hills circulated in mid-June, they had 20 no-shows — highly unusual.
'We're forced to operate under the extreme pressure and in the midst of this collective trauma,' said Zoey Knittel, executive director of CAMP, 'but we'll continue doing it because we believe healthcare should be accessible to all dogs and cats, regardless of their family, socioeconomic or immigration status.'

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Miami Herald
5 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Hochman restored ‘normalcy' as LA's top prosecutor. Can it last under Trump?
LOS ANGELES -- When President Donald Trump deployed the National Guard to quell protests last month against immigration raids unfolding across Los Angeles County, he claimed widespread lawlessness forced him to send in the troops. Days later, L.A. County District Attorney Nathan Hochman stepped in front of news cameras to announce charges against people who allegedly attacked police during the demonstrations. He avoided mentioning Trump or the swarms of masked federal agents descending on parks, workplaces and schools, but tried to push back against the White House's chaos narrative. Noting that the unrest was confined to a small section of downtown, Hochman promised to hold the lawbreakers accountable and disputed that Los Angeles was "under siege." Reflecting on the moment in a recent interview with The Times, Hochman said he wanted to set the record straight without igniting a partisan dispute. "What I'm hearing and reading and seeing is a political discourse that I have no interest in engaging in," he said. "But one that is misstating what the factual context is on the ground." A former Republican who rebranded as an independent last year, Hochman promised to "get politics out" of the district attorney's office. He endorsed Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential race but has stuck to his self-described "hard middle" since, focusing instead on restoring order to an office he criticized as being too chaotic under his predecessor. Now more than six months into Hochman's first term, prosecutors and law enforcement officials say the new district attorney has delivered "a return to normalcy" after the contentious term of progressive luminary George Gascón. By repealing nearly all of Gascón's sweeping policies, Hochman is allowing his prosecutors to mete out justice as they see fit, restoring a relative degree of harmony to an office that spent four years at war with itself. But Trump's aggressive immigration enforcement campaign is testing the limits of Hochman's neutrality. When immigration agents followed two women through an L.A. courthouse last month and arrested them, it drew outcries from nearly all corners of L.A.'s legal community. But not Hochman, whose strained diplomacy has raised eyebrows. "When the head prosecutor in the county doesn't take a position, silence may appear to the community as support," said L.A. County Public Defender Ricardo Garcia. Hochman said that his office is not collaborating with the federal government on immigration enforcement and that he would prefer if immigration agents let state-level cases play out before taking action. "I'm doing my best to focus on my mission, which is public safety. There's a lot of politics going on and a lot of noise above that mission, whether it's the president squabbling with the governor, squabbling with the mayor or anybody else who wants to interject in the political discussions," he said. "I'm going out of my way nowadays to keep our focus in this office on the public safety aspect." It was that focus that made Hochman speak up at the news conference. He recalled watching TV news and social media clips of the first weekend of protests that echoed Trump's proclamations that the city might burn down. "You'd swear to God, L.A. was under siege. I mean I got scared the first night," he said. "I'm calling up my people and I'm saying, 'Is this going on throughout the city and the county?'" Superpowers, celebrity trials and stark contrasts Hochman's measured approach stands in contrast not only to Gascón's but also to his counterpart's at the federal prosecutor's office in Los Angeles. During a news conference on arrests of people who allegedly attacked police during last month's protests, Hochman calmly laid out the legal reasoning for the various prosecutions during the politically charged events. By comparison, U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli took the microphone minutes later and parroted Trump verbatim before pushing a long-held conservative suspicion about out-of-state agitators causing violence. Although Hochman talked as a candidate about crime in apocalyptic tones, took significant money from conservative megadonors and worked with fundraisers tied to Trump, his overhaul of the district attorney's office has not resembled the right-wing makeover some feared it would. If anything, Hochman's law and order orientation is in line with statewide voter shifts on criminal justice reform. Gone are Gascón's reformist policies discouraging the use of cash bail and limiting the use of sentencing enhancements. The death penalty is back on the table, although Hochman has not yet pursued it against a defendant. Six months into his term, data show Hochman is charging felonies at roughly the same rate Gascón did. Although the new district attorney vowed during his campaign to charge more juveniles as adults, so far he has pursued a total of five cases - the same number Gascón had at this time last year, according to a spokesperson for the office. After Hochman wiped out Gascón's ban on filing certain misdemeanors, prosecutors charged nearly 70% of all low-level cases presented by police in the first half of 2025, records show. Hochman says it's a necessary step to deter criminals, but Garcia and other advocates warn it puts more people at risk of deportation. Hochman says he's merely enforcing the law, and often presents himself as a man trying to get the trains back on time. In his downtown office, a framed silver age comic book sits by his desk, chronicling the adventures of "Mr. District Attorney." Hochman laughs when describing the 1940s hero who seems to share his straight-ahead approach to the job. "He doesn't have any superpowers," Hochman says. "Turns out, he's just a really good lawyer." In an attempt to win over rank-and-file prosecutors, Hochman filled his administration with office veterans. And he's made a point of dropping in on trials large and small - from celebrity defendants to juvenile cases far from the headlines - to cheer on his staff. "We've seen a return to normalcy. We have a general understanding of what the expectations are of us," said Deputy District Attorney Ryan Erlich, president of the union that represents most of Hochman's staff. "We feel the upper management understands the job that we do, and it allows us to communicate and work on issues." Marilyn Manson, Menendez brothers and political pitfalls Good vibes aside, some of Hochman's decisions have rankled line prosecutors and led to political pitfalls. The office has been on the wrong end of several high-profile cases this year, leading some prosecutors to question why the district attorney's even-keel behavior tends to falter when the lights are on brightest. "He wants to be recognized, so he's always involved in these high-profile cases," said one veteran deputy district attorney, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution. "Sometimes to the detriment of the case." In January, Hochman announced he would not bring rape charges against rock star Marilyn Manson - roughly four months after he held a campaign event alongside some of Manson's purported victims to attack Gascón's handling of the case. "You don't parade people out. … I found that so deeply offensive," said Lenora Claire, a former member of the district attorney's office's victim advisory board. "What was that choice other than being completely irresponsible? He hadn't reviewed the case." Hochman said the case was handled appropriately and prosecutors made a decision not to charge that was "rooted in facts and the law, not a political agenda." Hochman's personal involvement in the resentencing hearings for Erik and Lyle Menendez, the brothers who killed their parents in a pair of brutal shotgun murders in 1989, also drew scrutiny. The brothers were each serving a life sentence with no hope of release until Gascón petitioned for their resentencing last year, a move Hochman opposed both on the campaign trail and then in court. Hochman's interactions with the Menendez family drew allegations of bias and his decision to transfer the prosecutors who filed Gascón's petition resulted in a civil suit. During one hearing in May, he personally took over arguments in the courtroom and said the brothers needed to show proper "insight" into their crimes, even after a judge repeatedly warned him it was legally irrelevant. The brothers were resentenced and could be released by the parole board later this year. Hochman defended his hands-on approach - and maintained he ultimately came out ahead. "When people say did you win or lose the Menendez case, I say we won. The defense was asking for immediate release through a voluntary manslaughter finding. The judge didn't go there," Hochman said. Tougher sentences, ticked off attorneys After a campaign fueled by pro-law enforcement rhetoric, some defense attorneys say Hochman's election has emboldened prosecutors to become unnecessarily aggressive. "They are focused more now on incarceration and high prison sentences, as opposed to probation and the opportunity for rehabilitation," attorney Damon Alimouri said. One of Alimouri's clients, Gerardo Miguel, is currently awaiting trial in a vandalism and burglary case after allegedly smashing his way into a Los Angeles home while screaming, "call the police" before hiding in the victim's bathroom, according to court records. No one was injured in the incident. Miguel did not steal anything, nor does he have a criminal record. Yet, Alimouri said, the district attorney's office's only plea offer would send his client to state prison. "[The prosecutor] said, I'm concerned about the safety of the public, this guy could have done X, Y and Z," Alimouri said of the plea negotiation. "But the fact of the matter is [my client] didn't do X, Y and Z. He curled up in the fetal position and called for help." Garcia, the public defender, also expressed frustration that Hochman's prosecutors have been fighting attempts to get defendants into the county's Rapid Diversion Program, which allows defendants to get treatment without taking on a criminal conviction. The program has a 90% success rate, according to Garcia. Hochman, who championed the use of some mental health diversion programs during his campaign, says it's a lack of county resources that limits the use of alternative justice programs. "We don't have enough beds, anywhere in this county, for dealing with that whole population," Hochman said. Allocating resources is the job of L.A. County's Board of Supervisors, a panel that leans heavily left. Hochman won't face reelection until 2028, and until then observers say his centrism could be an asset. "The advantage to being an independent is he can put the voters in the city before his political party," said Dan Schnur, who teaches political communications at the University of Southern California. "Anyone with a D or an R next to their name comes under immense pressure to toe their respective party lines." ____ Times staff writer Richard Winton contributed to this report. ____ Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Novi attorney, ultramarathoner dies during 102-mile race in Colorado mountains
A Novi family law attorney and veteran ultramarathoner died Friday, July 11, while running the 102.5-mile Hardrock Hundred Mile Endurance Run in the mountains of Colorado. The San Juan County (Colorado) Sheriff's Department and Silverton, Colorado Medical Rescue team received a search-and-rescue call shortly after 9 a.m. July 11 about CPR in progress on a person on the racecourse by safety team members with the Hardrock 100 ultramarathon, the rescue team said in a news release on Facebook. Response required sheriff's and medical rescue crews to take 4x4 offroad vehicles on backcountry roads and to then hike a quarter mile up a steep, rugged, remote trail to the scene, near Gold Lake on Little Giant Trail. Resuscitation efforts were ultimately unsuccessful. The San Juan County Coroner's office later confirmed the identity of the deceased woman as Elaine Stypula, 60, of Oakland County, Michigan, the rescue team said on Facebook. A cause of death was not released. Stypula ran a family law firm in Novi. Her profile on her website mentions, "In her free time, Elaine has completed multiple Ironman triathlons and currently competes in ultra distance runs, adventure races of 100 or more miles and mountain climbing." Ultramarathons are races longer than a 26.2-mile marathon that can be 100 miles or more and often run in extreme conditions of heat or elevation. Stypula's Instagram page includes photos of her apparently summitting Mount Rainier, Washington, and running ultramarathons in places like South Africa and Denali, Alaska. "My beautiful, vibrant mom unexpectedly passed away this morning. I am at a loss for words," Anna Rose Sebring posted to Instagram on July 11, adding on July 13, "My whole entire heart is with you in heaven. You were an angel to this world making friends everywhere you went. You were my biggest fan, supporter, and believer. You never stopped challenging yourself and always found something new to do." The Hardrock Hundred Mile Endurance Run is a 102.5-mile race in Silverton, Colorado, that features a 33,197-foot climb and descent, for a total elevation change of 66,394 feet, all at an average elevation of more than 11,000 feet. The run is held on a loop course on four-wheel-drive roads, dirt trails and cross-country trails in southern Colorado's San Juan Range. "We are deeply saddened to share that a beloved member of our Hardrock Hundred Mile Endurance Run family has passed away during this year's event," race organizers stated on the Hardrock 100's website. "Our hearts are with their family, friends and fellow runners as we grieve this tremendous loss. We are committed to caring for runners, crews, volunteers and all members of our community through the event's duration and beyond." More: Michigan dispute with Trump administration over funding hits sheriff's marine patrols More: In 1816, Michigan didn't have a 'summer.' Here's how that happened. Icarus Florida Ultrafest, on its Facebook page, noted that Stypula was a multiple-time veteran of its race. "Elaine passed doing what she loved and what kept her motivated," race officials stated. Contact Keith Matheny: kmatheny@ This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Novi attorney, ultramarathoner dies during 102-mile Colorado race


The Hill
7 hours ago
- The Hill
ICE tactics under fire as its clout swells
Morning Report is The Hill's a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here or using the box below: Thank you for signing up! Subscribe to more newsletters here President Trump's vow to conduct mass deportations recently gained altitude from Congress, the Supreme Court and his most conservative supporters. With the imminent arrival of a significant hike in federal funding, thanks to the July 4 enactment of the 'big, beautiful bill,' and the high court's ruling last month that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) can swiftly deport migrants to locations outside their native countries, the administration promises a far larger ICE force as its tactics draw scrutiny. Public approval for hard-line immigration policies has fallen in the past year, polling shows, with Gallup reporting recently that the shifting views have come amid illegal border crossings dropping sharply this year. The share of those surveyed by Gallup who want to see immigration reduced has fallen from 55 percent in 2024 to 30 percent now. Seventy-nine percent of surveyed U.S. adults say immigration is a good thing for the country — a record high, Gallup reports, citing its June survey. The president and White House border czar Tom Homan say they want to increase the number of deportations of migrants and 'criminals,' while farmers, small business owners and hospitality CEOs are lobbying Trump to pull back on the sweeps by masked ICE agents who are deporting their workers. Referring to himself in the third person, Trump's border czar promised a Turning Point USA Student Action Summit audience in Tampa on Saturday, 'Tom Homan is going to run the biggest deportation operation this country has ever seen. Take it to the bank.' Homan attempted Sunday on CNN to clarify comments he made Friday about the grounds ICE agents can use to make arrests, which were criticized as defending racial profiling. Physical appearance 'can't be the sole reason to raise reasonable suspicion,' he told CNN, but he said immigration agents can detain people 'based on their location, their occupation' and 'their physical appearance.' Federal agents have been accused by immigration lawyers of making arrests of men who look foreign or Latino and asking evidentiary questions later. If an ICE agent observed someone with a suspected MS-13 tattoo, Homan told CNN, it 'may be one factor to add to other factors to raise reasonable suspicion.' Trump's immigration efforts will soon gain $170 billion in additional border security resources from the 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act,' the GOP package that will make ICE the highest funded law enforcement agency in the federal government. Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said in a new memo tied to the Supreme Court ruling that federal immigration officers 'may deport immigrants with as little as six hours' notice to countries other than their own even if officials have not provided any assurances that the new arrivals will be safe from persecution or torture.' Thousands of people with work permits and families in the U.S. may be targeted for removal to countries to which they have no ties or relatives, according to lawyers advocating for migrants. The president argues his administration wants to eject migrants who are murderers, criminals and the 'worst of the worst.' Citing new ICE statistics, The Associated Press reported that nearly 72 percent of about 57,900 people ICE detained as of June 29 had no criminal convictions. Some 14,300 with pending criminal charges had no convictions. More than 27,000 people who are subject to immigration enforcement had no criminal convictions. SUBTRACTION: Meanwhile, as Congress increases funding and manpower for ICE, the State Department on Friday fired more than 1,300 civil servants and Foreign Service employees after the Supreme Court gave the administration the go-ahead to reshape the executive branch. This week, Senate Republicans are fighting over their legislative sway, specifically in relation to Trump's request to rescind $9.4 billion in foreign aid and about $1 billion in public broadcasting approved by Congress. 'I suspect it's going to be very close. I don't know if it will be modified in advance, but I can't really honestly look Americans in the face and say that I'm going to be doing something about the deficit if I can't cut $9 billion,' Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who backs the cuts, told CBS on Sunday. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting has defenders in the Republican caucus, although it's unclear how senators will seek to alter the rescissions package. A The New York Times podcast titled 'Is Congress about to kill this local radio station?' broadcast on Friday noted that Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) supports public media in her state. Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) also has expressed opposition to the cuts to public broadcasting as currently drafted. Tom Abbott, longtime station manager of Alaska's KFSK-FM, a public radio station in Petersburg, Alaska, told the Times he might have to lay off five employees to survive with two and limit current programming if Congress accedes to Trump's rescission request. SMART TAKE with BLAKE BURMAN You might not have seen this above the fold, but it's a big deal. The Pentagon is the largest shareholder in MP Materials Corp., buying $400 million worth of stock, potentially taking up to a 15 percent stake in the rare earth minerals producer. The first-of-its kind deal announced late last week could help the U.S. compete with China, which dominates rare earth production across the globe. Rare earth minerals, which are in the technology you're reading this on and that you will use to get to work today, for example, are largely found in China. It currently has 69 percent of global production. This wasn't the administration's only step on rare earth minerals last week. Energy Secretary Chris Wright was in Wyoming on Friday for the opening of a rare earth mine. We'll likely see more from the administration on this issue. What's less certain is how much more government investment there could be, and what that might look like. TARIFFS AND TRADE: With Trump's Aug. 1 revised tariffs deadline looming, world leaders and businesses across the globe are scrambling to untangle the situation. Trade deals with the U.S., when they exist, have proven vague, and the president has often pushed back deadlines and adjusted tariff rates for individual countries and multi-member blocs after initial negotiations. Trump on Saturday threatened to slap 30 percent tariffs on goods from Mexico and the European Union. The president's announcements took aim at two of Washington's largest trading partners and threatened to upend the global economy if implemented. U.S.-E.U. trade in goods totaled nearly $1 trillion last year. The U.S. and Mexico are linked in a North American trading zone under a trade agreement negotiated during Trump's first term. Almost $840 billion in goods pass between them. French President Emmanuel Macron called on the EU to 'defend European interests resolutely' after Trump's latest tariff threat. 'It is more than ever up to the commission to assert the union's determination to defend European interests resolutely,' Macron said on the social platform X. 'In particular, this implies accelerating the preparation of credible countermeasures, by mobilising all the instruments at its disposal, including anti-coercion, if no agreement is reached by 1 August.' ▪ The Hill: Here's a running list of Trump's tariff letters to various countries. ▪ The Atlantic: Households will pay an average of $2,400 more for goods this year due to Trump's policies, experts estimate. ▪ The Wall Street Journal: Economists expect stronger growth and job creation and a lower risk of recession. Since Trump first announced his slate of 'reciprocal' tariffs on April 2, trade negotiators representing various countries have scrambled to keep up. Trump has pushed back deadlines at the drop of a hat. Some negotiations have faltered at the eleventh hour, requiring concessions — such as Canada abandoning its digital services tax — to restart. At times the tariffs have also appeared tied to issues beyond trade. With Brazil, Trump has gone after the country's prosecution of its former president. And Trump has accused Canada of not doing enough to curb the flow of fentanyl over the northern border. Airlangga Hartarto, the Indonesian minister for economic affairs, met with U.S. officials in Washington on Wednesday. He described talks with Washington to The New York Times like 'going through a labyrinth' and arriving 'back to Square 1.' 'We're still far away from making real deals,' Carsten Brzeski, global head of macroeconomics at ING Research in Germany, told the Times, saying the uncertainty is 'poison' for the global economy. National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett on Sunday defended Trump's 50 percent tariff against Brazil — a country with which the U.S. has a trade surplus. On ABC News's 'This Week,' Hassett said the president has the authority to impose new tariffs if he thinks there is a national defense emergency or a national security threat. 'The bottom line is that what we're doing absolutely, collectively across every country is we're onshoring production in the U.S. to reduce the national emergency, that is, that we have a massive trade deficit that's putting us at risk should we need production in the U.S. because of a national security crisis,' he said. Trump's letter announcing the tariffs on Brazil focused on the ongoing criminal case against his political ally, former President Jair Bolsonaro. ▪ The New York Times: Most nations are still negotiating with the U.S. in hopes of avoiding punitive tariffs. At the same time, they're looking to diversify their trading partners. EPSTEIN FILES: Trump over the weekend defended Attorney General Pam Bondi amid continued fallout over the Trump administration's handling of material related to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. Trump wrote on Truth Social that Bondi is doing 'a FANTASTIC JOB' in her role and called into conservative activist Charlie Kirk's radio show to express his support for the attorney general. Bondi on Sunday also made an appearance in Trump's box at the FIFA Club World Cup final in New Jersey, where the president participated in the award ceremony after Chelsea beat Paris Saint-Germain, 3-0. The attorney general has faced backlash from MAGA allies after promising earlier this year to release files on Epstein, a convicted sex offender who died in jail. The Justice Department and FBI issued a memo this month concluding Epstein had no 'client list' and killed himself, despite theories otherwise long pushed in conservative circles. Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino has been at the center of the internal fighting over the Epstein situation, with a source familiar confirming to The Hill that he was furious over how the documents were handled. Trump was asked Sunday by reporters if Bongino, previously a far-right podcaster, was still the deputy FBI director, and whether they had spoken recently. 'Oh I think so. I did, I spoke to him today. Dan Bongino, very good guy. I've known him a long time. I've done his show many many times. He sounded terrific, actually. No, I think he's in good shape,' Trump said. ▪ The Hill: Bondi reportedly fired several Department of Justice employees with ties to former special counsel Jack Smith, who probed Trump's handling of classified documents and efforts to overturn the 2020 election. ▪ The New York Times: The FBI is using polygraphs to test officials' loyalty. FLOOD RESPONSE: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Sunday said a new Federal Emergency Management Agency rule she initiated for contracts approval did not delay federal responses to deadly flooding in Texas, as reported by news outlets. 'Absolutely false,' she told NBC's 'Meet the Press.' ELMO, NO: The 'Sesame Street' Elmo account on social media platform X was hacked Sunday with an antisemitic post, among others, and references to Trump and Epstein. The posts were later deleted. 'Elmo's X account was compromised today by an unknown hacker who posted disgusting messages, including antisemitic and racist posts,' a spokeswoman for Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit organization behind 'Sesame Street,' said in a statement. POLITICS: South Carolina is already setting the stage for shadow 2028 presidential primaries as potential White House hopefuls from both parties travel to the Palmetto State. California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) traveled through rural South Carolina during a two-day tour last week, while Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D) and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) are expected to head to the state later this month. Over on the Republican side, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin is speaking at a South Carolina GOP fundraiser next month. The moves have raised speculation over whether the individuals are laying early groundwork for possible 2028 White House bids and what role South Carolina will play in the political calendar. Six months into Trump 2.0, Democrats are feeling hope — and fear — as they fight to find their footing and claw themselves from the wilds of the minority in next year's midterm elections. Despite finding powerful messaging tools in Trump's domestic agenda, polls show the Democrats' approval ratings at historic lows. And the party is still scrambling to identify a national leader almost half a year after Trump's return to the White House. 'This is a nightmare scenario for the Dems right now,' one Democratic strategist told The Hill's Amie Parnes and Mike Lillis. 'We better pray long and hard that the country is going to be in a f‑‑‑ing depression because I don't know how else we find ourselves out of this mess.' ▪ The Hill: Beshear won't rule out a 2028 presidential bid. Texas: Trump is keeping Republicans guessing over whether he'll endorse in the closely watched Texas GOP Senate primary as incumbent Sen. John Cornyn's (R) path to victory against state Attorney General Ken Paxton looks increasingly fraught. An endorsement from Trump has the potential to give Cornyn a much-needed boost as polls consistently show him trailing Paxton. New York: Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) said on Sunday he plans to speak soon with Trump to discuss a path forward as he considers whether to launch a bid for governor in New York. Entering the statewide race would likely pit him against Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), who is gearing up to launch her own campaign against New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D). North Carolina: Sen. Thom Tillis's (R-N.C.) decision not to seek reelection next year could have ramifications for Republican leaders in Congress. The senator has indicated he is excited to wield his new-found political freedom, giving Senate leaders a fresh headache as they look to pass the lion's share of the GOP agenda and key nominees over the next year. Republicans are eager to see Lara Trump enter the Tar Heel State Senate race, seeing her as their best opportunity to keep the seat after Tillis's retirement announcement. The daughter-in-law of the president and a former Republican National Committee co-chair, Lara Trump has quickly become an early favorite for the GOP nomination if she chooses to run. A source close to the president told The Hill she's considering a bid and would clear the Republican field if she chooses to go forward. ▪ The New Yorker: Is Elon Musk's 'America Party' worth taking seriously? STATE WATCH: On Friday, a federal judge ordered ICE to temporarily halt aggressive raids in Southern California because its enforcement tactics violated civil rights and the Constitution. California may have lost up to $3 billion in potential revenue from a signature emissions-reduction program over the past year, according to a new report. Hospitals across the country are bracing for the impact from the Medicaid cuts in Trump's sweeping tax cut law. Rural facilities in particular say they are going to have to make difficult financial decisions about which services to cut and which to keep. Planned Parenthood stands to lose a huge portion of its federal funding under Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' which could result in the closure of up to 200 clinics, according to the organization. UKRAINE: Trump is expected to announce a new plan to arm Ukraine today that would include offensive weapons, Axios reports. The move would mark a major shift for the president, who previously vowed to only send defensive arms. Officials in Kyiv, Washington and the EU hope the announcement will shift Russian President Vladimir Putin's calculations regarding a truce. 'Trump is really pissed at Putin. His announcement tomorrow is going to be very aggressive,' Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told Axios Sunday. Trump is expected to unveil the plan when he meets with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in Washington today. It comes on the heels of his announcement that the U.S. plans to sell NATO allies weaponry that it can pass on to Ukraine. ▪ The Hill: Trump says US will send Patriot missiles to Ukraine. ▪ The Guardian analysis: Ukraine must get ready for a future in which there is no ceasefire with Russia. ▪ Reuters: Russia's and China's foreign ministers on Sunday discussed the Ukraine war and their ties with the United States. ▪ The Washington Post: Ukraine said it killed Russian agents who assassinated a senior intelligence officer. ISRAEL: Ceasefire talks to end the war in Gaza stalled over the weekend as Israel and Hamas remain divided over the extent of Israeli forces' withdrawal from the Palestinian enclave. The indirect talks over a U.S. proposal for a 60-day ceasefire continued throughout Saturday, marking a total of seven days. Trump said he hoped for a breakthrough soon based on a new U.S.-backed ceasefire proposal. Meanwhile, a United Nations summit on a two-state solution between the Israelis and Palestinians has been rescheduled to the end of July. But French President Emmanuel Macron is not expected to attend, making it less likely that it will trigger a series of high-profile announcements on recognition of a Palestinian state. ▪ BBC: Ten people, including six children, were killed in an Israeli airstrike while waiting to fill water containers in Gaza on Sunday. The Israeli military conceded a 'technical error' caused the strike. ▪ NBC News: Sayfollah Musallet, a 20-year-old American from Florida, was beaten to death by Israeli settlers on Friday while visiting relatives in the occupied West Bank. And finally … 💍 Katie Lettie and Vincent Bauer, a Virginia couple together for a decade, won a free wedding contest on Valentine's Day and were married with plenty of traditional pomp on Saturday — at the Arlington Central Public Library outside Washington, D.C. (Video HERE.) In Sunday news coverage, the happy couple noted they're big readers and Arlington community fans. 'This is such an amazing gift,' Lettie said. 'It's such a magical experience.' Other book enthusiasts who stopped by the library on a Saturday became surprise wedding guests. The nuptial concept was the brainchild of Julia Berg, manager of programs and partnerships at Arlington Public Library, who said she always thought the physical space of the library 'really, really lends itself' to a wedding ceremony or party. (Note: The state's motto is 'Virginia is for Lovers.') The Friends of Arlington Public Library and many local vendors made the 'free' wedding possible after more than 50 couples entered the contest. 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