Friday, February 13, 2026

Chuck D, Cardi B, Diana Ross and Cass Elliot

Gene Simmons is not a great person.  That's a reality that a lot of people are only recently learning.  He made some idiotic comments this week  Chuck D has responded.  Angela Andaloro (PEOPLE) reports:


On Feb. 12, the Public Enemy frontman, 65, entered the conversation, started by Gene Simmons on the Legends N Leaders podcast. The KISS bassist, 76, shared his feelings about hip-hop acts being inducted and included in exhibits at rock music's most sacred space.

“It’s not my music,” said the rocker. “I don’t come from the ghetto. It doesn’t speak my language. And as I said in print many times, hip-hop does not belong in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, nor does opera or symphony orchestras.

“The fact that, for instance, Iron Maiden is not in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame when they can sell out stadiums, and Grandmaster Flash is... Ice Cube and I had a back and forth — he’s a bright guy, and I respect what he’s done. He shot back that it’s the ‘spirit’ of rock and roll … I just want to know when Led Zeppelin’s going to be in the Hip-Hop Hall of Fame."

[. . .]
Responding to a post discussing Simmons' comments, Chuck D tweeted, "Gene definitely has his opinion and it carries major weight… however it is The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame … not considering it ‘ROCK’ may hold a debatable point but clearly RAP and some other genres of movement are the ‘ROLL.' "

"Rock and Roll clearly splintered all over the place in the 1960s and big-banged ever since," he concluded.


Madonna is in The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  The 'rock' has been elastic from the beginning.  What it really means i what kids are listening to.  It's a little late in the game for Gene to show up whining.  Rap's been a kid's favorite since the 80s.  It has stood the test of time.  It deserves to be in the Hall.



Rapper Cardi B engaged in a public back-and-forth with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) after the two exchanged remarks in a social media spat about Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

During the opening night of her Little Miss Drama Tour in Palm Desert, California, the Grammy-winning rapper told fans: “If ICE come in here, we’re gonna jump they asses. I got some bear mace in the back. They ain’t taking my fans, b****. Let’s go!”
ICE is facing mounting allegations of misconduct, including racial profiling, heavy-handed tactics, denial of due process and abusive treatment of detainees. The agency’s practices have come under scrutiny after two U.S. citizens were shot dead in the streets of Minneapolis.

In response to a TMZ article about Cardi B‘s initial comment, DHS wrote on X, “As long as she doesn’t drug and rob our agents, we’ll consider that an improvement over her past behavior.”
The department’s post referenced Cardi B’s public admission that, before becoming famous, she had drugged and robbed men while working as a stripper.

In response to the DHS post, Cardi B wrote, “If we talking about drugs let’s talk about Epstein and friends drugging underage girls to rape them. Why yall don’t wanna talk about the Epstein files?”


Good for Cardi. Meanwhile Danni Scott (METRO) notes:

Brighton Pride is getting ready for its biggest ever party to celebrate 35 years, with Diana Ross and Self Esteem set to headline, with Jessie J among the new set of artists now announced.

At 81, the legendary Diana will become the oldest ever headliner for Pride on the Park when she takes to the main stage.

For her Brighton Pride debut, Ms Ross will be belting out classic tunes like Ain’t No Mountain High Enough, Endless Love and, of course, I’m Coming Out.

She’s not the only vocal powerhouse headlining this year, as Saturday’s slot will also be taken up by the newly announced Self Esteem.



Brighton Pride has pulled off a major coup by securing global superstar Diana Ross as the Sunday headliner for the festival’s milestone 35th anniversary celebration this summer.

The 81-year-old Motown legend will close out Pride on the Park on August 2nd at Preston Park, marking her first-ever appearance at Brighton’s iconic LGBTQ+ festival. Saturday’s proceedings will be headlined by chart-topping British artist RAYE, who returns to Brighton Pride for the third time after memorable performances in 2018 and 2022.
Ross’s appearance represents a significant booking victory for Brighton, with organizers securing the performance as a UK festival exclusive. The “Queen of Motown” is expected to deliver a career-spanning set featuring timeless classics including “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough,” “I’m Coming Out,” “Endless Love,” and “Stop! In The Name of Love.”

Paul Kemp, Brighton & Hove Pride’s Managing Director, couldn’t contain his excitement about the announcement: “Welcoming the incomparable Diana Ross as our Sunday headliner as a UK live show exclusive is a dream come true. Her legendary voice and catalogue of hits will be an unforgettable moment in Brighton Pride history.”

Lastly, the one and only Cass Elliot.  Angie Martoccio (ROLLING STONE) reports:

"Mama" Cass Elliot died more than 50 years ago, but her legacy lives on through the songs she sang as a founding member of the Mamas and the Papas and her one-of-a-kind solo work. She's been consistently present in pop culture through the years, with her late-Sixties hit "Make Your Own Kind of Music" appearing in television shows, viral TikTok memes, and SNL skits. Now, Elliot's life will be portrayed on the big screen, with the upcoming film My Mama, Cass.
The film, starring Baby Reindeer‘s Jessica Gunning as Elliot, is based on a 2024 memoir by Elliot's daughter, Owen Elliot-Kugell, who was just seven when her mother died in 1974. "I've wanted to tell her story for a really, really long time, and I didn't know how to do it," Elliot-Kugell told us in an exclusive interview ahead of the memoir's publication. "It's kind of weird to say, but I feel like, in some ways, I know her better now." 

The film, currently in development, will be adapted by novelist and screenwriter Emma Forrest, with Veritas Entertainment attached to produce. "This is not a traditional Mamas & the Papas biopic," the film's press release reads. "It is a definitive Cass Elliot film, centered on her life, legacy, and the mother-daughter bond that shaped them both."

 Stan noted this in "Mama Cass Elliot movie?" last night.  I think a lot of us are excited about this film. 

Closing with C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"


Friday, February 13, 2026.  The Epstein class suffers a loss at Goldman Sachs, Pam Bondi lied to Congress, Chump moves his war on immigrants onto migrants who legally became US citizens, ICE gets caught in more lies, Senator Patty Murray calls for an end to ICE attacking our Constitutionally protected rights, Senator Mark Kelly gets a legal win, and much more. 


LE MONDE reported last night, "A top lawyer for Goldman Sachs will leave the Wall Street bank, its chief executive said Thursday, February 12, after her close ties with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were revealed. The firm's general counsel Kathryn Ruemmler had courted intense scrutiny after the Department of Justice dumped emails in recent weeks that showed her extensive relationship with the disgraced financier."  The Epstein Class.  Ruemmler was part of it.  Joshua Franklin and James Fontanella-Khan (FINANCIAL TIMES OF LONDON)  note that she plans to step down June 30th and quote her declaring, "I made the determination that the media attention on me, relating to my prior work as a defense attorney, was becoming a distraction."  Her prior work as a defense attorney?  She wasn't Epstein's defense attorney.  She was his friend.  She gave him free legal advice.  THE GUARDIAN notes:

 Up until her resignation, Ruemmler repeatedly tried to distance herself from the emails and other correspondence and had been defiant that she would not resign from Goldman’s top legal post, which she had held since 2020.

While Ruemmler has called Epstein a “monster” in recent statements, she had a much different relationship with him before he was arrested a second time for sex crimes in 2019 and later killed himself in a Manhattan jail; Ruemmler called Epstein “Uncle Jeffrey” in emails and said she adored him.


Rob Copeland, Maureen Farrell, Lauren Hirsch and Duy Nguyen (NEW YORK TIMES) explain:


She educated him on how the law differentiates between underage victims of sex crimes and adult prostitutes. “I think the point is that if she was underage, she could not legally consent to engaging in prostitution,” Ms. Ruemmler wrote to Mr. Epstein in 2015.

She offered advice on how to knock down the credibility of one of his accusers, writing in one email that Mr. Epstein’s lawyer could push the woman into a “perjury trap.”

Ms. Ruemmler signed some emails “xoxo” and swapped photos. She joked with Mr. Epstein about the weight of visitors at New Jersey rest stops and speculated about the sexual orientation of a well-known hedge fund billionaire.

And over a series of meetings, she sought his advice on personal and professional matters, (“men aren’t interested in women my age,” one email lamented).

In 2019, while interviewing for the job at Goldman, Ms. Ruemmler told Mr. Epstein that she was wearing gifts from him. “Am totally tricked out by Uncle Jeffrey today!” she wrote.


She lied about her relationship with Epstein.  But let's grasp that she knew what she was doing.  She knew she was lying about her relationship with Epstein.  But she also knew what he was doing.  Note this paragraph again:


She educated him on how the law differentiates between underage victims of sex crimes and adult prostitutes. “I think the point is that if she was underage, she could not legally consent to engaging in prostitution,” Ms. Ruemmler wrote to Mr. Epstein in 2015.


Wow.  What a concerned and moral authority the woman was. Ruemmler was advising a man convicted of child prostitution "on how the law differentiates between underage victims of sex crimes and adult prostitution."  She wrote, "I think the point is that if she was underage, she could not legally consent to engaging in prostitution."


And Goldman Sachs think they can wait until June 30th for her to exit?

The Epstein Class. 


Mackenzie Grizzard (BAYLOR LARIAT) notes:


Former Baylor President Kenneth Starr invited disgraced New York financier Jeffrey Epstein to visit Baylor’s campus in July 2012, according to newly released files.

The initial visit took place on July 30, 2012, inside Pat Neff Hall and was organized by Starr’s then-assistant Jennifer Jarvis and Epstein’s assistant Lesley Groff. Epstein was picked up from the Texas State Technical College-Waco airport by two assistants — Jeff Wittekiend and Angela Gray Oliver.

According to the files, after Epstein’s initial visit, Starr invited him to return to share a meal at the Allbritton House.

“It was great having Jeffrey here,” Starr wrote in his email. “He’s a prince. Next time, he is warmly welcome and encouraged to ‘break bread’ with me at the Allbritton House. His menu, my pleasure.”


They continued to remain in contact and Starr defended him:


In November 2018, the Miami Herald began investigating Epstein’s 2008 plea deal, under which he was sentenced to 18 months in jail on one count of soliciting prostitution and one count of soliciting prostitution from a minor. Epstein had to then register as a sex offender.

The Herald reached out to the Lanier Law Firm for a written statement from Starr about Epstein’s past conviction. Director of Marketing and Communications Johnny D. Cargill emailed Starr, who responded with a preliminary quote, with an official comment “forthcoming,” he said.

“Since paying his debt to society, Jeffrey has led a truly exemplary life and has moved on from this chapter over ten years ago,” Starr’s email reads. “He was a valued client of my former firm and remains to this day a trusted personal friend.”

 

At THE COLUMBIA SPECTATOR, Shoshoshi Das, Ruby Topalian, and Theresa Cullen note:


The College of Dental Medicine has “taken action” against two officials affiliated with Columbia who maintained relationships with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, the Office of Public Affairs announced in a Wednesday statement.

College of Dental Medicine administrators helped Karyna Shuliak, Dental ’15, gain admission in 2012 after she was initially rejected earlier that year. Epstein referred to Shuliak as his girlfriend in at least one email released by the Department of Justice on Jan. 30.

College of Dental Medicine administrators had also solicited donations from Epstein. On Aug. 16, 2012, three months after Shuliak was admitted to the school, Epstein advanced $100,000 to a fund named after Ira Lamster, then-dean of the College of Dental Medicine. Lamster served as dean from 2001 to 2012 and was another administrator involved with Shuliak’s acceptance. He left the University voluntarily in 2017.

Lamster acknowledged alerting the admissions team to Shuliak’s “interest” in a Columbia dental training program for international students after Epstein asked him to. “At that time we were pursuing a major gift from JE, and it was logical to agree to JE’s request,” Lamster wrote in a statement to Spectator. “It was made clear to the admissions director, however, that she should be judged on the merits of her application.”

Dr. Thomas Magnani, Dental ’80, has been officially removed by Columbia as part of this action. A former College of Dental Medicine professor and admissions review committee member, he helped admit Shuliak and solicited funds from Epstein. Magnani, who was Epstein’s dentist, appears earlier in a 2011 correspondence as a point of connection between Epstein’s assistant, Lesley Groff, and Columbia administrators. In April 2011, Groff and senior administrators arranged a special tour of the College of Dental Medicine for Shuliak as a “favor” to Magnani, according to the emails.

The other College of Dental Medicine official Columbia claims to have taken actions against is Letty Moss-Salentijn, the Edward V. Zegarelli Professor of Dental Medicine.

Moss-Salentijn, the vice dean for curricular innovation and interprofessional education, “will step down from her administrative roles,” Wednesday’s statement reads. The University did not state whether Moss-Salentijn will continue teaching at Columbia.


Pam Bondi embarrassed herself and her post as Attorney General with her outrageous performance before the House Judiciary Committee this week.   S.V. Date (HUFFINGTON POST) notes she also committed perjury:


Attorney General Pam Bondi falsely claimed in her sworn testimony to Congress Wednesday that Jeffrey Epstein’s partner in child *** trafficking was not transferred to a “lower-level” prison, even though her Justice Department moved Ghislaine Maxwell to a “Club Fed”-type facility last summer. 
Days after meeting with Bondi’s deputy and former Donald Trump defense lawyer Todd Blanche, Maxwell was transferred from Tallahassee, Florida, to the Federal Prison Camp in Bryan, Texas. Tallahassee is a low-security prison, but FPC Bryan is an even more relaxed “minimum-security” facility and is typically meant for nonviolent, white-collar criminals in their final months of captivity.
Bondi, like all witnesses who appear before Congress, began her testimony by agreeing to answer questions truthfully “under penalty of perjury” at the start of her appearance before the House Judiciary Committee.

So Pam's accidentally outed an undercover FBI agent and she's betrayed the survivors by releasing their names and additional information and on top of that?  She perjured herself Wednesday when she appeared before the House Judiciary Committee.   

She also outed herself as spying on members of Congress.  As we noted yesterday:

The Jayapal exchange revealed something else.  Remember Pam's binder?  Dan Manan (NBC NEWS) reports:

Attorney General Pam Bondi at a House Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday seemed to have a printout of Rep. Pramila Jayapal’s history of searches of the Department of Justice’s database of documents related to the notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Photos of a black binder that Bondi had at the hearing showed the words “Jayapal Pramila Search History” and a list of documents whose numbers coincide with the number of Epstein files.

Jayapal, a Washington state Democrat who sits on the Judiciary Committee, and other members of Congress have visited the DOJ in recent days to view documents related to Epstein that are not available to the public.

Jayapal blasted Bondi in a post on X on Wednesday evening.

“It is totally inappropriate and against the separations of powers for the DOJ to surveil us as we search the Epstein files,” Jayapal wrote.

“Bondi showed up today with a burn book that held a printed search history of exactly what emails I searched,” the congresswoman said.

“That is outrageous and I intend to pursue this and stop this spying on members.”

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., when asked by MS Now if Bondi’s alleged action was appropriate, at first said, “I’m not going to comment on an allegation that is unsubstantiated. I don’t know anything about it.”

“I haven’t seen or heard anything about that, but that would be inappropriate if it happened,” Johnson said.


Washington, D.C. (February 11, 2026)—Today, Rep. Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the House Committee on the Judiciary, issued the following statement after photographs revealed that Attorney General Pam Bondi has tracked the search history of Members of Congress who have reviewed the unredacted Epstein files at a satellite office of the Department of Justice:

"The Department of Justice has required Members of Congress who wish to review the slightly-less-redacted Epstein files to travel to a DOJ annex, sit at one of four DOJ-owned computers, use a clunky and convoluted software system provided by DOJ, and search for and read documents while DOJ staffers look over our shoulders. It is the perfect set up for DOJ to spy on Members’ review, monitoring, recording, and logging every document we choose to pull up.

“Today, photographs of Attorney General Bondi’s ‘burn book’ confirmed my suspicions. These photos show Bondi came to our hearing with a document entitled ‘Jayapal Pramila Search History’ and then listed the documents my colleague, Rep. Jayapal, reviewed while at DOJ, apparently to prepare the Attorney General for any questions Rep. Jayapal might ask.

“Not only has the Department of Justice illegally withheld documents from Congress and the American people. Not only has Attorney General Bondi failed to bring a single indictment against a single co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. But now Bondi and her team are spying on Members of Congress conducting oversight in yet another blatant attempt to intrude into Congress’s oversight processes.

“It is an outrage that DOJ is tracking Members’ investigative steps undertaken to ensure that DOJ is complying with the Epstein File Transparency Act and using this information for the Attorney General’s embarrassing polemical purposes. DOJ must immediately cease tracking any Members’ searches, open up the Epstein review to senior congressional staff, and publicly release all files—with all the survivors’ information, and only the survivors’ information, properly redacted—as required by federal law. I will also be asking the DOJ Inspector General to open an inquiry into this outrageous abuse of power. Let us use this humiliating disclosure about the Attorney General's work ethics to do a complete reset on the Epstein coverup.”   

 

###



INSKEEP: What are your thoughts about that paper with your search history in the attorney general's hand?

JAYAPAL: Well, I think it's completely against the separation of powers. We are supposed to be able to, as lawmakers, go in, review the files, take whatever we want from there, not be surveilled and spied on by the Department of Justice. And it's - that was my search history. It was much more extensive than that, but that was the first page. And she clearly came in prepared with that information. In fact, I think she probably opened it up to us on Monday, two days before the hearing, so she could see what we were going to search and ask her about. Totally unacceptable. And we've asked for, immediately, a change in the process so that the DOJ is not spying on us.

INSKEEP: House Speaker Mike Johnson was asked about this. He said, I know nothing about it. Not going to comment on it. But if it happened, it's inappropriate. Are you getting any support from Republicans on that?

JAYAPAL: Yeah. I actually spoke to Mike last night about this, and I do think that there is bipartisan agreement that we should be able to review those files without the Department of Justice surveilling us. And that's exactly what she was doing, and I think she was doing it in preparation for the hearing. But also, I think they want to know what we're going to - what we're pulling up so that they can use it in some way. That was in her Burn Book. That's what we call that binder with all the opposition research against us that she kept trying to insult different members of Congress with. And I think that she - you know, I think there is bipartisan support to say this cannot continue to happen, and we need a whole new process for how we review these files and who tracks, you know, any of this.

INSKEEP: Just so I understand - and he'll speak for himself - but did you understand Speaker Johnson to be on board with taking some kind of action here?

JAYAPAL: Well, I think I'll just - I won't say what he said to me, but I'll just say what he said in the public quote. And I showed him and told him exactly what had happened and that the search was my search, and it clearly was surveilling.

INSKEEP: Now, you raised in the hearing the failure to redact the names of victims and then the redaction of other people who are in the files, one of them a man named Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem. As far as I could tell, you didn't get an answer about that particular case, but you brought it up in any case. What draws that particular redaction to your attention?

JAYAPAL: Well, the point I was trying to make is that the Transparency Act that we passed in Congress specifically said you have to redact the private information of survivors and you have to not redact the private information, the personal information of any potential predators or co-conspirators. And that's clearly what that email indicated, is that there was a powerful person who was being protected. He happened to - as I mentioned in my remarks, he happened to also be somebody with financial ties to Donald Trump and personal ties to Steve Bannon. And so I wanted to get her answer about why she was violating - allowing the violation of the law in both these instances, the nonredaction of that personal information of survivors and then the redaction of powerful people that she seemed to be protecting. She didn't want to answer that question.

The most important thing to me was getting her to turn around to the survivors and apologize to them because the harm is irreparable. That information is out there now. Nude photographs are out there. Even if the Department of Justice redacts that, that does not bring justice to the survivors. And, you know, it was just stunning to me that she refused to turn to them and take responsibility for what her Department of Justice had done to re-traumatize these survivors.


Two things on the above exchange.  First, Pam Bondi created her own worst photo op.  Molly Sprayregen (LGBTQ NATION) notes:

A powerful photo is circulating on social media that many are saying is a stark symbol of the administration’s lack of concern for the Epstein victims.

The photo shows a group of Epstein survivors raising their hands after Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D) asked who had not had the opportunity to meet with the Justice Department. Attorney General Pam Bondi, who was being questioned during a bizarre and combative House Judiciary Committee hearing, keeps her head down and her back turned to the victims, refusing to look at them. 

[. . .]

To many, the photo has become representative of Bondi’s attitude throughout the hearing – and of the administration’s attitude toward the Epstein controversy overall. 

 

Second, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem?  Dylan Butts (CNBC) notes:

U.S. officials made new disclosures from the Epstein files on Monday, naming who they believe was the recipient behind a disturbing email sent by the deceased financier and sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein, in which he referenced a supposed “torture video.”

That name is Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, one of the Emirates’ most powerful business figures, who, for years, maintained a relationship with Epstein, with the communications often including explicit content, according to documents recently released by the U.S. Justice Department.

The latest revelation comes after Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky. and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif. reviewed unredacted documents at the Justice Department on Monday.

Massie posted a screenshot of the email on the social media platform X. In the email, Epstein wrote to a redacted recipient: “where are you? Are you ok, I loved the torture video.” The reply stated: “I am in china I will be in the US 2nd week of May.”

[. . .]

The DOJ’s file release shows that Epstein once referred to Sulayem as a “close personal friend” he had known for 8 years. He also described Sulayem as one of his most trusted friends in other writings. 

In the world of Epstein, being a trusted friend appeared to have come with private communications regarding topics including but not limited to: arrangements with masseuses; sexual encounters with women; escort and prostitution services; lewd comments and jokes; and pornography.

Additionally, the two often appeared to be discussing in-person meetings. On several occasions, Sulayem corresponded with Epstein about Little St. James, Epstein’s private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands, which prosecutors allege was used as a base for sex trafficking.


Moving over to Chump's war on immigrants,  Rhian Lubin (INDEPENDENT) reports on Chump's latest immigration move -- removing citizenship from naturalized citizens:

The Trump administration is moving ahead with plans to strip some foreign-born Americans of their citizenship, with a target of 200 cases a month, according to a report.

In December 2025, guidance was provided to offices of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the agency within the Department of Homeland Security, requesting that they “supply the Office of Immigration Litigation with 100-200 denaturalization cases per month” in 2026.
The plans are now in motion, according to NBC News. Experts with the immigration agency have reportedly been carrying out visits to offices around the country and reassigning staff to review whether some citizens processed there could be denaturalized, people familiar with the plans told the outlet.

It is rare to strip someone of their citizenship. Between 1990 and 2017, there were only 11 denaturalization cases on average each year, according to the Brennan Center for Justice.

Individuals may only be legally stripped of their U.S. citizenship for a few specific reasons, such as if they committed fraud during the citizenship application process.



Trump has long been preoccupied with the notion of citizenship — who gets to be an American and who doesn’t — and has expressed displeasure with immigrants from what he calls third world nations. He is separately seeking the power to strip citizenship from those born to foreigners in the U.S., though “birthright citizenship” appears in the Constitution. The Supreme Court is weighing his argument.

Trump’s Truth Social message to Americans on Thanksgiving Day last year was that he would remove anyone who wasn’t a “net asset” to the U.S. “or is incapable of loving our Country, end all Federal benefits and subsidies to noncitizens of our Country, denaturalize migrants who undermine domestic tranquility, and deport any Foreign National who is a public charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western Civilization.”

Roughly 800,000 people become naturalized citizens every year, according to DHS. To become a naturalized citizen, a candidate must be over 18, already be a legal permanent resident, speak English, know U.S. history and social studies and have “good moral character,” according to the Immigration and Naturalization Act.

Foreign-born Americans were generally stripped of citizenship only if they were found to have committed fraud during their application processes. In past decades, those cases focused on ferreting out former Nazis who fled to the U.S. after World War II under false pretenses. Both Democratic and Republican administrations have sought to increase investigations, but it’s still rare for a reason, a former USCIS official said.


ICE lies.  Never forget that fact.  Jem Bartholomew (GUARDIAN) notes one of their imploding lies, "Marimar Martinez, a US citizen, was shot five times by a border patrol agent in October while in her vehicle. She was charged with a felony after officials at the Department of Homeland Security accused her of trying to ram agents with her vehicle. But the case was dismissed after video evidence emerged showing that an agent had steered his vehicle into Martinez’s car."  David Edwards (RAW STORY) notes, "President Donald Trump appeared personally supportive of an immigration agent who shot an innocent immigrant five times, according to evidence provided by her attorneys. At a press conference on Wednesday, attorneys for Marimar Martinez announced that their client was suing the U.S. government for shooting her last October after a border patrol agent's SUV allegedly swerved into her vehicle. Agents later claimed that Martinez had rammed them."  Evan Williams (TAG24 NEWS) notes that "Former Border Patrol commander-at-large Gregory Bovino reportedly emailed his congratulations to the Customs and Border Protection officer who shot a woman five times in Chicago.  'Good afternoon. I'd like to extend an offer for you to extend your retirement beyond age 57,' a leaked email sent by Bovino to Charles Exum, the agent who shot Marimar Martinez five times on October 4, 2025."  Renee Hickman (REUTERS) explains, "Video, text messages, emails and other records were released by the U.S. Attorney's Office in Chicago late on Tuesday after a district court judge said that the government had shown 'zero concern' about Martinez's reputation even after the government dropped the case in November."

 
Lawrence O'Donnell did a great segment on Marimar last night as he spoke with her attorney Christopher Parente.



Turning to the environment, Chump's determined to destroy the world.  Betty's noted twice this week -- "Chump moves to destroy the world" and "Chump destroys the planet" -- Chump's pan to rescind the 2009 EPA finding that greenhouse gases are a danger to our pubic health.  Dharna Noor (GUARDIAN) reports that he rescinded it yesterday and notes:

On social media, Barack Obama said the repeal will leave Americans “less safe, less healthy and less able to fight climate change – all so the fossil fuel industry can make even more money”.

The former secretary of state John Kerry called the new rule “un-American”.

“Repealing the Endangerment Finding takes Orwellian governance to new heights and invites enormous damage to people and property around the world,” said Kerry, who also served as Joe Biden’s climate envoy. “Ignoring warning signs will not stop the storm. It puts more Americans directly in its path.”

The final rule removes the government’s ability to impose requirements to track, report and limit climate-heating pollution from cars and trucks. Transportation is the largest source of climate pollution in the US.


Meanwhile, defeat for Chump and his nimby pamby boy Pete Looselips Hegseth.  Their attempt to curtail the free speech of Senator Mark Kelly received a set back.  Elena Moore (NPR) reports:


A federal judge in Washington, D.C., has granted Sen. Mark Kelly's request for a preliminary injunction against Pete Hegseth, in a lawsuit filed by the Arizona Democrat accusing the defense secretary of trying to punish him for his political speech.

Kelly, a former Navy Captain, sued Hegseth in January, one week after the defense secretary moved to formally censure him for participating in a video where he and several Democratic lawmakers told U.S. servicemembers they can refuse illegal orders.

"Our rules are clear. You can refuse illegal orders," Kelly says in the video.


At MS NOW, retired Lt. Col. Rachel E. VanLandingham, writes:

I’m a military retiree who has used my platform as a tenured professor and military law expert to push the Pentagon to improve — often through public criticism of its policies. I was greatly relieved, then, that a federal judge expressed Thursday just how dangerous the Trump administration’s witch hunt against Sen. Mark Kelly is. It is a threat to all military retirees’ freedom of speech and our unique ability to contribute to U.S. national security through that exercise.

In a fiery opinion that quoted Bob Dylan, Judge Richard Leon of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia thwarted Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s attempt to retaliate against Kelly — and abuse military law — over the senator’s speech. Leon temporarily enjoined the Pentagon from trying to reduce Sen. Kelly’s military rank because he had publicly criticized the Trump administration.

Hegseth’s speech-suppressive campaign against Kelly is extraordinary, and Judge Leon met the moment by clearly outlining its breathtaking consequences for those of us who served our nation in uniform. He noted that it “threatened the constitutional liberties of millions of military retirees.”

In early January, Hegseth issued a formal “letter of censure” against Kelly, a Navy combat veteran and astronaut who honorably retired in 2011 after decades of active-duty service. Hegseth claimed that Kelly’s various public critiques of the Pentagon last year — including his appearance in a video with five other military veteran lawmakers urging service members to disobey unlawful orders — constituted conduct both prejudicial to good order and discipline plus conduct unbecoming an officer. Both crimes are unique to the military.

Hegseth’s letter, in addition to characterizing Kelly’s speech as violative of military law, directed Pentagon proceedings to revisit Kelly’s retired rank, even though federal law does not allow administrative rank reduction based on postretirement conduct. Hegseth also threatened criminal prosecution if the senator continued making public comments, a dangerous turn given that the military criminal code extends to retirees (thanks to Civil War-era federal law that needs to be excised) and contains speech crimes with no analog in the civilian world.

Notably, Hegseth pursued this military administrative action solely against Kelly, and not the five other military veterans in the so-called seditious six video, because of Kelly’s status as a retiree. Like all military retirees with at least 20 years of honorable active-duty service, Kelly earns a pension based on his last rank while on active duty and remains subject to military criminal jurisdiction. 


Megan Mineiro and Zach Montague (NEW YORK TIMES) note, "The blunt ruling came after a grand jury in Washington rejected an extraordinary attempt by federal prosecutors in Washington to secure a criminal indictment against Mr. Kelly and five other Democratic lawmakers who together released a video in November directed at members of the military and intelligence community."


Let's wind down with this from Senator Patty Murray's office:


Murray: “The American people need us to meet this moment. We need to rein in ICE and CBP. We need to call out the avalanche of lies. And most importantly, we need to stand up for our communities—because they are being terrorized by their own government.”

Murray: “If Republicans want Democratic votes to fix that—then they need to understand half-measures will not cut it. What Democrats are demanding is reasonable and it is necessary. None of what we are asking for is extreme for local law enforcement—so why don’t those basic standards apply to ICE. There’s no good answer. Sorry—but I don’t care if Stephen Miller wants a special force that’s empowered to beat up and detain or shoot whomever he doesn’t like. In America, we believe in due process. We believe in our Constitution. We believe in law and order—safe streets, law enforcement we can trust. If you don’t like that? Go to Russia.”

Murray: “If ICE and CBP do not want to be called secret police—then they should not be wearing masks and should be carrying identification 24/7. If they do not want to be accused of kidnapping people—then they should not be dragging people out of cars and houses without warrants. And if they do not want to be accused of being lawless—then they need to start following the law.”

Murray: “Democrats have made abundantly clear: we cannot continue funding a rogue Department without substantial reforms. Accountability at DHS must be written into law… We’ve put forth incredibly reasonable reforms… But we cannot kick the can down the road as Republicans want us to do. The time to rein in these rogue agencies is right now.”

***WATCH: Senator Murray’s full floor speech***

Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, took to the Senate floor to speak about ICE and CBP’s flagrant abuses of Americans’ basic constitutional rights—and the imperative for Congress to take action to rein in the agencies. She made clear that while she remains at the table to negotiate key reforms the American people are demanding, she will not support a stopgap funding bill to continue the unacceptable status quo, and she underscored that Republicans and the White House need to work with Democrats to finalize a bill that reins in ICE and CBP.

Senator Murray’s remarks, as delivered, are below:

“What we have seen over the last many months is downright un-American: masked federal agents trampling people’s First, Second, and Fourth Amendment rights and more, breaking into people’s cars, teargassing protestors, using children as bargaining chips, and of course, killing American citizens in broad daylight.

“It is clear to just about everyone in every part of this country that—ICE and CBP are out of control—and must be reined in. Clear to everyone that is except maybe some Republicans in Congress.

“You know, for years, my colleagues on the other side of the aisle have warned of government overreach and rogue federal agencies trampling Americans’ constitutional rights. They’ve gone to great lengths to speak out against ‘government tyranny’ when we ask mega corporations not to pollute. And you can bet they will scream to high heaven about ‘injustice’ and ‘government thugs’ when we ask billionaires to pay their fair share in taxes. Seriously! They will raise a racket for billionaires!

“But the truth is, the government tyranny Republicans long warned about is here—and many of them are just silent, they enabled it by cutting a $140 billion blank check for Secretary Noem to deploy masked ICE and CBP agents to terrorize our communities. ICE was spending beyond their funded level, so last summer Republicans handed Kristi Noem enough cash to fund an army.

“And she is using that blank check to send masked men going door-to-door asking for papers, charging into houses without a warrant, breaking car windows without a reason, staking out school zones, and dragging citizens and legal residents hundreds of miles away without so much as confirming their immigration status, or charging them with a crime.

“If Republicans are serious about their warnings on government tyranny, they must work with us to put an end to the insane attacks we’ve seen, including on Americans’ most basic rights. But right now, we still have some Republicans—who are seriously insisting masks have to stay on Trump’s secret police, and who are insisting DHS cannot be required to get judicial warrants before breaking into your home.

“We have a few Republicans acknowledging that the violence we’ve seen from ICE and CBP that must end, But we need to see more real, tangible progress to rein these agencies in through legislation—basic constraints upheld in law.

“Democrats are not asking for the moon—we are not trying to overhaul immigration laws. We are insisting on basic measures to protect our constitutional rights and hold these agencies accountable to some of the basic standards as local police. 

“After all, if ICE and CBP do not want to be called secret police—then they should not be wearing masks and should be carrying identification 24/7. If they do not want to be accused of kidnapping people—then they should not be dragging people out of cars and houses without warrants. And if they do not want to be accused of being lawless—then they need to start following the law. But they have been ignoring law after law, and court after court.

“In a recent decision, a Bush-appointed judge—a former Scalia clerk!—in Minnesota appended a list of 96 court orders that ICE has violated. What else do you call that—except a rogue agency.

“The American people need us to meet this moment. We need to rein in ICE and CBP. We need to call out the avalanche of lies. And most importantly, we need to stand up for our communities—because they are being terrorized by their own government.  

“It is not ‘targeted law enforcement’ when Trump sends 8,000 federal agents into one city—and has them go door-to-door. Especially not when agents literally tell people they are asking for papers solely because of how someone looks or speaks.

“It is not about our immigration laws when Trump is grabbing people who are following the law, people who have green cards in the mail, and even people who are U.S. citizens. It is not about stopping violent criminals when ICE is staking out schools and grabbing parents during pick up. In fact, just this week, we saw that the administration’s own data shows that only a tiny fraction of people they have detained are violent criminals. 

“They have also taken military spouses, taken parents of Marines, they have even taken veterans. In fact, last week—they deported a veteran. Do my colleagues hear me here? Trump deported a veteran! Think about that. Sit with that. We cannot look away from what is happening in this country. Men who fought for our freedom—are being denied theirs. Being exiled from the country they risked their life for.

“Meanwhile, children—kids who have done nothing wrong—are having their parents snatched away from them or are being snatched up themselves in a cruel ploy to use them as leverage.

“Given how outrageous, how lawless, how heartlessly un-American, Trump’s crackdown has become, it’s clear why people across the country are demanding action. And I don’t just mean in opinion polls—though the polls do actually overwhelmingly support action to rein in ICE, and even Republican voters think ICE has gone way too far. 

“But, I also mean people are demanding action in that great American way— protesting! Using their voice. Speaking out. Putting a spotlight on what ICE and CBP are doing to their friends and to their neighbors. And the Trump Administration’s response to that great American tradition—the First Amendment in action—has been about as unhinged, and un-American as it gets.

“The level of wanton violence and lawlessness we are seeing out of ICE and CBP is without comparison in recent U.S. history. This is the kind of stuff you expect out of Putin’s Russia. Agents are saying things to protestors like, ‘I will put a bullet in your head if you don’t shut up,’ or ‘You raise your voice… I erase your voice.’ And, Mr. President, the actions are even worse than the words.

“How many peaceful protestors have been tear gassed before Republicans think it’s a problem? How many children? Wasn’t the video of a drive-by gassing bad enough? What about the photo of the man pinned to the ground, getting sprayed in his face? How many car windows have to be shattered, and people dragged from their cars? No warrant—no nothing!

“Were you not outraged to see that woman on the way to a doctor’s appointment—dragged out of her vehicle for no reason? Were you not appalled to learn agents shattered a glass car window, dragged away a mother, and left a one-month-old baby in the back of the vehicle, blanket covered in glass shards? Were you not alarmed—to watch an agent point a rifle at the car window of someone sitting in their own driveway and bust out the window with a gun?

“How many people does ICE have to detain before Republicans stop sitting on their hands? How many kids do they have to tackle—like the young man at the Target that they slammed to the ground, marched off with, and then dropped him off miles away with no charges once they realized he was a U.S. citizen. There’s also the time they tackled a pregnant woman, or the time they marched a citizen out of his house in his underwear—in freezing weather.

“Agents have recklessly caused car accidents, only to arrest the person they ran into and then make things up. Agents have even tried to round up witnesses of their crimes and rush them out of state, and through deportation, before they can testify at a trial.

“How many people have to be murdered by federal agents in cold blood—until Republicans join us to stop this tyranny? And how many lies will Republicans tolerate? Because we have witnessed brazen, and dangerous, lies from this administration. They lied about Alex Pretti brandishing a gun—when he clearly never touched it. They lied about Renee Good trying to target agents with her car—when she was clearly just trying to drive away.

“They lied about a young woman ramming CBP agents before they shot her—only to drop the case against her. Newly released body cam footage shows the agent turned his wheel toward her vehicle. They said that an L.A. man was shot after he ‘weaponized his vehicle and began ramming law enforcement’—but body cam footage shows an agent’s gun go off by accident as he switched hands. They said someone in detainment died from suicide—when an autopsy found it was a homicide. They said someone got eight fractures in his skull from running into a wall on purpose—the man says he was beaten. Greg Bovino said he deployed tear gas on a crowd after someone threw a rock at him—only to admit the truth in court when confronted by video evidence.

“Mr. President, the list goes on, and on. And that’s just the lies we know about! Enough. Law enforcement cannot be lawless—but that’s exactly what we are seeing from ICE and CBP. And us Democrats have made abundantly clear: we cannot continue funding a rogue Department without substantial reforms. Accountability at DHS must be written into law.

“Now, my Democratic counterparts and I have been at the table the whole time. We’ve put forth incredibly reasonable reforms. Reforms that would increase accountability and transparency and compliance with constitutional rights. Reforms that do not impact DHS’s ability to detain convicted, violent criminals. And we remain committed and ready to land a funding bill that enshrines those reforms into law—and ensures FEMA, TSA, and other important functions get funded.

“But we cannot kick the can down the road as Republicans want us to do. The time to rein in these rogue agencies is right now. We cannot waste another moment—and if Republicans refuse to make the changes the American people are demanding, they are forcing a Republican shutdown of DHS.

“The chaos, the brutality—all of it has happened at the explicit direction of this President and a Republican Congress that wrote him a blank check for ICE and CBP.

“If Republicans want Democratic votes to fix that—then they need to understand half-measures will not cut it. What Democrats are demanding is reasonable and it is necessary. None of what we are asking for is extreme for local law enforcement—so why don’t those basic standards apply to ICE. There’s no good answer. Sorry—but I don’t care if Stephen Miller wants a special force that’s empowered to beat up and detain or shoot whomever he doesn’t like.

“In America, we believe in due process. We believe in our Constitution. We believe in law and order—safe streets, law enforcement we can trust. If you don’t like that? Go to Russia.

“So, Democrats are focused on getting a bill—but it has to be a bill that reins in the abuses we are seeing from ICE and CBP. And until a bill is negotiated, we cannot kick the can down the road and give license to Noem to continue the chaos with another CR that continues funding for ICE and CBP.

“Americans are demanding accountability, and we will settle for nothing less.

“And so, Mr. President, given the track record of lawlessness from ICE and CBP—which seems to be growing longer every single day. I will be voting no on the procedural vote today—and on Republicans’ inadequate proposal.

“The alleged withdrawal from Minneapolis is long-overdue—but it is not nearly enough to end the chaos and the violence we are seeing nationwide.

“We need real reform. We cannot let the Trump Administration act like things are business-as-usual when it is tear gassing peaceful protestors, detaining people in a complete violation of their rights, and even murdering citizens in cold blood. We cannot trust the same people who are lying about what is happening, to be truthful about accountability. We cannot trust the same administration that is purposefully trampling our rights, and causing this chaos—to end it.

“Late last night, we received more details on the White House’s proposal—and what’s clear at this point: it does not come close to addressing Americans’ grave concerns about how ICE and Border Patrol are operating. So, Mr. President, we need to see a lot more movement to rein in these rogue agencies.

“So, Congress has to do its job—and I will continue to negotiate in good faith to deliver the reform and accountability we need to see. But we have to stop this outrageous tyranny.”

###

The following sites updated:

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Tina Turner, Jimi Hendrix, L7 and Heart

Music grab bag.  




Following Tina Turner's passing in 2023, her legacy continues to shine in unexpected ways.

Take the city that she once embraced as a teenager, for example. To celebrate one of the most iconic female artists of all time, the St. Louis CITY SC professional soccer team just unveiled The Tina Turner Kit, a historic collaboration with adidas honoring the Queen of Rock ‘n’ Roll and her deep ties to St. Louis.
The MLS team’s homage to Turner marks the first adidas collaboration with a female music artist on a soccer kit and includes a number of cultural events to celebrate her impact on St. Louis, including a concert with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra (SLSO), a Turner-focused pop-up shop and a music-themed community education initiative for youth and young adults.

"Introducing The Tina Turner Kit 🎤," the caption of the soccer team's recent joint Instagram post reads. "A tribute to the Queen of Rock ‘n’ Roll and her unstoppable energy. A celebration of her enduring spirit and the city where she found her voice."

Tina Turner, a legend and, though the article doesn't note it, she was a huge fan of soccer. Tina's a legend and so is  Jimi Hendrix .  





Expect heavy crosstown traffic in Greenwich Village later this month when the City of New York officially co-names West Eighth Street “Jimi Hendrix Way.” The sign will be affixed to the stretch of Eighth Street where Electric Lady Studios, the recording outpost Hendrix opened in 1970, is located. The ceremony will take place on the corner of West Eighth Street and Sixth Avenue at 11 a.m. on Feb. 24.
Speakers at the event will include Hendrix’s sister, Janie, musician Stevie Van Zandt, and NYC District 2 Council Member Harvey Epstein. Janie Hendrix, who is president and CEO of Experience Hendrix LLC, led the charge for the co-naming alongside Van Zandt, acting on behalf of his TeachRock nonprofit educational initiative, and writer Jeff Slate.

TeachRock is launching a new lesson, Jimi Hendrix: Rock's Trailblazing Innovator and Influential Guitarist, which examines the late artist’s blues and R&B roots, for the occasion. The lesson uses exclusive archival footage from Experience Hendrix and expert interviews.

"This collaboration speaks to the heart of our mission - carrying on Jimi's legacy through education," Janie said in a statement. "His music is a powerful gateway for young minds to connect with history, creativity, and their own potential."

Jimi remains a guitar legend.  He still towers over everyone all these decades later.  L7 is a rock band that is often associated with grunge or alternative rock.  They predated grunge by few years forming in 1985.  



Fans were pretty bummed when pioneering grunge/alt-rockers L7 broke up in 2001, nearly 10 years after their hit song "Pretend We're Dead" climbed the charts. But the all-female band reunited in 2014, due to popular demand, and now they're rocking harder than ever.

As announced over a couple of recent Instagram posts, L7 has a super busy summer ahead. First up, in June, the group is hitting the road with Australian punk rockers Amyl and the Sniffers, making stops in Toronto on the 4th and Montreal on the 5th before playing Colorado's iconic Red Rocks Amphitheatre on the 17th.

Then, in July, L7 is heading to Belgium with Joan Jett, Chris Isaak, The Raveonettes and about a million other acts for the Sjock 50 festival, which takes place on the 10th, 11th and 12th.
Commenters on L7's post about the Sjock fest appearances were definitely excited.

"I might need to hop in the road case for this one," one person joked, with a second adding, "Best news of the year!"

"What a lineup!" raved someone else.


Heart is a rock band with Ann and Nancy Wilson at its heart.  They have a huge string of hits including "Magic Man," "Tell It Like It Is," "What About Love," "Never," Barracuda," "Alone," "Who Will You Run To," "Crazy On You," "Straight On," "Heartless," "Straight On," "This Man Is Mine," "Even It Up," "Nothing At All," "Dog & Butterfly," "These Dreams," "There's The Girl," "Who Will You Run To," "Stranded," "All I Want To Do Is Make Love To You," "I Didn't Want To Need You" and "Will You Be There In The Moring."


 



Heart's 1975 debut album, "Dreamboat Annie," is set to be inducted into the prestigious Grammy Hall of Fame.

The Recording Academy revealed the latest choices, a mix of iconic albums and songs, for the induction on Feb. 11.

Established in 1973, The Grammy Hall of Fame lists eligibility requirements for recordings that exhibit "qualitative or historical significance" and are at least 25 years old. The ones chosen to be immortalized are selected by a special vote.


Closing with C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"


Thursday, February 12, 2026.  Pam Bondi has a psychotic break while appearing before the House Judiciary Committee, she also reveals on camera by accident that the Justice Dept is spying on members of Congress, AP looks into ICE and finds several problematic issues, and much more. 


"You don’t tell me anything you washed up lawyer."  So hissed Pam da Bimbo Bondi yesterday as she appeared before the House Judiciary Committee.  She can't speak plainly.  She can't address facts.  All she knows how to do is rage like an angry sow.  She embarrasses herself in front of the nation. US House Rep Jim Jordan is the Chair of the Committee and US House Rep Jamie Raskin is the Ranking Member.  We'll note the Ranking Member's opening statement.


Ranking Member Jamie Raskin:  Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and welcome, Attorney General Bondi.

You’ve got the best lawyer’s job in America. Your mission is justice and your clients are the American people. 

But, to promote justice for the people, you must listen to the victims, like the women seated behind you. They’re some of the hundreds of survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s global sex trafficking ring demanding the truth for America and accountability for the abusers who trafficked and raped them. You still haven’t met with these survivors. 

So with their permission, let me introduce to you the survivors and late survivors’ family members who are present today: 

Theresa Helm; Jess Michaels; Lara Blume McGee; Dani Bensky; Liz Stein; Marina Lacerda; Sky and Amanda Roberts, who are the family of the late Virginia Giuffre; Sharlene Lund; Rachel B.; and Lisa Phillips. 

Now, you’re not showing a lot of interest in the victims, Madam Attorney General. 

Whether it’s Epstein’s human trafficking ring or the homicidal governmental violence against citizens in Minneapolis, as Attorney General, you’re siding with the perpetrators and you’re ignoring the victims. That will be your legacy unless you act quickly to change course.

You’re running a massive Epstein cover-up right out of the Justice Department. You’ve been ordered by a subpoena and by Congress to turn over six million documents, photographs and videos in the Epstein files but you’ve turned over only three million. You say you’re not turning over the other 3 million because they’re somehow duplicative. But we know that there are actual memos of victim statements in there. And you also took down the Department of Justice’s prosecution memo from 2019. So it’s clearly not all duplicative. But even if it were, why not release it, just release all the duplicative stuff. 

In the half you did produce, you redacted the names of abusers, enablers, accomplices and coconspirators, apparently to spare them embarrassment and disgrace, which is the exact opposite of what the law ordered you to do.

Even worse, you shockingly failed to redact many of the victims’ names, which is what you were ordered to do by Congress. Some of the victims had come forward publicly, but many had not. Many had kept their torment private, even from family and friends. But you published their names, their identities, their images on thousands of pages for the world to see. So you ignored the law.

And even with over 100,000 employees at your disposal, you acted with some mixture of staggering incompetence, cold indifference, and jaded cruelty towards more than 1,000 victims raped, abused and trafficked. This performance screams cover-up.

Convicted sex trafficker and groomer Ghislaine Maxwell “opened the gates of hell” to Virginia Giuffre and hundreds of other victims, as Virginia recorded in her remarkable book Nobody’s Girl. But when Maxwell was subpoenaed to testify before Congress, you and Todd Blanche quickly moved her from a higher-security prison to a minimum-security camp in Texas where she’s enjoyed five-star treatment, including catered meals, private gym time, and access to a therapy puppy. All because Todd Blanche, who has utterly failed to investigate the monstrous crimes of Epstein and Maxwell’s co-conspirators, spent nine hours with Maxwell to satisfy himself she would have nothing untoward to say about Donald Trump, which is your only real interest in this whole matter. 

But abandoning victims and coddling perpetrators is what you do best. When the FBI opened a criminal investigation into the brutal killing in Minneapolis of Renée Good, a poet and 37-year-old mother of three, by Trump’s masked paramilitary ICE agents, you shut it down. You claim you’re investigating the cold-blooded murder of Alex Pretti, an ICU nurse at the VA, but how can we trust the Administration when the President and Kristi Noem call Pretti a “domestic terrorist” and Stephen Miller called him a “would-be assassin”?  Not only do you refuse to share evidence with the state and local investigators and prosecutors in Minnesota, but you blocked their access to the crime scene and the evidence. 

How are you seeking justice for Marimar Martinez, the Montessori school teacher in Chicago who was shot five times by a Border Patrol agent who bragged about it over text; or the family of Keith Porter Jr., a father of two shot and killed by an off-duty ICE agent in LA; or the family of Silverio Villegas González, shot and killed in Illinois minutes after dropping his children at school? There’s no sign of any movement at the Department of Justice. You even launched a criminal investigation into Renée Good’s grieving widow.

But it’s even worse. You’ve turned the People’s Department of Justice into Trump’s instrument of revenge.

Donald Trump orders up prosecutions like pizza, and you deliver every time. He tells you to go after James Comey, Letitia James, Lisa Cook, and Jerome Powell, the head of the Federal Reserve Board, and Members of the United States Congress including Adam Schiff, Mark Kelly, Elissa Slotkin, Chrissy Houlahan, Jason Crow, Chris Deluzio and Maggie Goodlander to name just a few. And you snap to it. You replace real prosecutors with counterfeit stooges who robotically do the president’s bidding. Nothing in American history comes close to this complete corruption of the justice function and contamination of federal law enforcement.

The good news is many serious lawyers at DOJ, including your very own political appointees—your own people—have refused your lawless orders.

Danielle Sassoon, your original pick for Acting U.S. Attorney in Manhattan, resigned rather than follow your corrupt order to quash an indictment against Mayor Eric Adams as a political favor from Donald Trump. A Federalist Society member who clerked for Justice Antonin Scalia, U.S. Attorney Sassoon refused to participate in this blatantly corrupt scheme. Her top assistant, Hagan Scotten, an Iraq War veteran and two-time Bronze Star recipient who clerked for Chief Justice John Roberts and then-Judge Kavanaugh, promptly resigned too, writing to your office: “I expect you will eventually find someone who is enough of a fool, or enough of a coward, to file your motion. But it was never going to be me.” 

You and the President nominated Erik Siebert, a fifteen-year career prosecutor, to be your U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. But after five months investigating Letitia James and James Comey, Siebert found no evidence to justify criminal charges. So you forced him out and replaced him with Lindsey Halligan, Trump’s personal lawyer from the Mar-a-Lago documents case, who had zero prosecutorial experience and no qualifications. And then you were humiliated when a federal judge found that this corrupt appointment was blatantly unlawful and threw out Halligan’s indictments entirely. And grand juries of American citizens have repeatedly rejected your vendettas and baseless indictments brought by the hacks left at DOJ now, with two different grand juries in Virginia voting down indictments against Letitia James in a single week. Just yesterday, another grand jury shut down your vendetta factory by rejecting an indictment against the six Members of Congress who had reminded servicemembers that they have a duty to refuse illegal orders.

You tried to get a grand jury to indict six Members of Congress who were veterans of our armed forces, on charges of seditious conspiracy, simply for exercising their First Amendment rights. I hope you will heed the wisdom and the constitutional patriotism of those grand jurors and not try it again by doubling down on that humiliation.

As your best lawyers are sacked for having participated in the January 6 case or just flee for the exits now, your new lawyers keep lying in court. In dozens of cases, your lawyers have been excoriated for lying to federal courts. Chief Judge Boasberg, right here in the District of Columbia, suggested your DOJ presented “a fraud on the court.” Other judges found your DOJ’s statements to be “inexplicably misleading,” “patently incredible,” “totally inconsistent,” and “so disingenuous that the Court is left with little confidence that the [government] can be trusted to tell the truth about anything.”

Now, as Ranking Member, I asked the Chairman to add a few extra rounds of questions today because we each have five hours of questions, not five minutes, but we’re stuck with five minutes. That’s clearly insufficient to give voice to America’s victims and survivors and demand answers about the corruption and cover-ups that have overtaken your Department.

We have just one round, so we ask you politely but firmly, Madam Attorney General: please don’t waste one second of our precious time by evading our questions, changing the subject, randomly reciting statistics to eat up time, or engaging in personal attacks against Members of Congress. We saw your performance in the Senate and we aren’t going to accept that. This isn’t a game. In the Senate, you brought a burn book, a binder of smears, to attack Members personally for doing the people’s work of oversight. Please set the burn book aside and answer our questions. And when you hear us reclaim our time, that means it’s time for you to stop speaking. We only have five minutes, so when we reclaim our time, that means you stop. And if you don’t, we will ask the Chair to stop the clock and let you go on his time.

The quality of justice in America depends on the character of our government. Please do your job and bring the Department of Justice back from the brink. The survivors seated behind you, and the American people watching everywhere, deserve a Department of Justice worthy of its name.

I yield back.



She lied in her opening remarks insisting that she had spent her "entire life fighting for victims and I will continue to do so."  No, Pam, you can't go after Chump's political enemies and then claim you've spent your life fighting for victims. 

All she wanted to do was to rant and rave and attack.  As she's done before, she came armed with binders.  It's where she writes down her insults ahead of time.  She also carries papers in the binders and that got her into trouble in this hearing.  

Let's note this exchange which was a fairly typical exchange. 


US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: We are joined in this room by some of the thousands of survivors from Jeffrey Epstein's horrific sex trafficking ring. They have shown incredible courage in speaking out, in demanding accountability to bring the predators and pedophiles to justice.  The Epstein Files Transparency Act required your Department of Justice to disclose the perpetrators connected with Epstein's criminal activities and to redact the information of survivors to protect their identities.  Let me show you what actually happened. First, in violation of the law, your department has shown a pattern of redacting the names of powerful predators.  Here behind me is one example of an e-mail from Epstein to a man whose name was redacted. The e-mail reads "Where are you? Are you ok. I loved the torture video."  Only after members of Congress demanded that we see the unredacted files did the world learn the name of this individual, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulaye, the chairman and CEO of a company that had financial ties to President Trump's business and personal ties to Trump's advisors, Steve Bannon Second, the survivors were not similarly protected.  Also in violation of the law.  Here is another e-mail entitled Epstein Victim List. We have blurred the names of the survivors for their protection but your Department of Justice initially released this list of 32 survivors names with only one name redacted  along with numerous files that disclose not only the names, the e-mails and the addresses of survivors but also nude photographs and even the identities of Jane Does who had been protected for decades until your department released their names. Survivors are now telling us that their families are finding out for the first time that they were trafficked by Epstein.  In their words "This release does not provide closure. It feels like a deliberate attempt to intimidate survivors, punish those who came forward and reinforce the same culture of secrecy that allowed Epstein's crimes to continue for decades."  To the survivors in the room, if you are willing, please stand, [at least 7 women stood up] and if you are willing please raise your hands if you have still not been able to meet with this Department of Justice.  Please know for the record that every single survivor has raised their hand.  Attorney General Bondi, you apologized to the survivors in your opening statement for what they went through at the hands of Jeffrey Epstein.  Will you turn to them now and apologize for what your Department of Justice has put them through with the absolutely unacceptable release of the Epstein files and their information? 

AG Pam Bondi: Congress woman, you sat before Merrick Garland, sat in this chair twice --

US House Rep Pramila Jayapal:  Attorney General Bondi --

AG Pam Bondi: No, I'm gonna finish my answer. 

US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: No, I'm going to reclaim my time because I asked you [crosstalk] Attorney General, I would like you to answer the question which is will you turn to the survivors?  This is not about anybody that came before you. It is about you taking responsibility for your Department of Justice and the harm that it has done to the survivors who are standing right behind you and are waiting for you to turn to them and apologize for what your Department of Justice members  

Chair Jim Jordan: Members get to ask the questions, the witness gets to answer in the way they want to answer, 

Pam Bondi: Mr Chairman she doesn't like my --  Why didn't she ask Merrick Garland this. 

US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: I'm reclaiming my time and when I will claim --

Pam Bondi: I'm not oing to get in the gutter for her theatrics. 

Chair Jim Jordan: The time belongs to the gentle lady. The gentle lady has 17 seconds. 

US House Rep Pramila Jayapal:  Thank you.  You're not going to answer this question, so let me just 

[cross talk]

US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: The witness is interrupting. 

Pam Bondi: The gutter with this woman.

Chair Jim Jordan: The gentle lady from Washington controls the time. The gentle lady has 17 seconds.  You can proceed with your final 17 seconds. 

US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: What a massive cover up this has been and continues to be . Donald Trump made the release of the Epstein files the center of his political campaign because he thought it would benefit him.  Then you got into office, Attorney General, claimed to have a client list, only to then say that there was no list.  Your deputy, Todd Blanche, met alone with Ghislaine Maxwell -- 

Chair Jim Jordan: The gentle lady has expired. 

US House Rep Pramila Jayapal:  -- and transferred her  to a minimum security prison and now you continue the cover up. And I wish that you would turn around to the survivors who are standing right behind and on a human level apologize for that for what have you done? 


It was shocking to see Pam Bondi scream and screech and throw down.  You never had the notion that she was defending the country but you always saw her rush to lie for Donald Chump.  Holly Baxter (INDEPENDENT) notes Pam's horrific performance:


At one point, those survivors of sexual abuse stood up and identified themselves. It was a particularly painful back-and-forth: Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) asked the Epstein victims to stand if they were comfortable. They did. She then asked them to raise their hands if they’d been unable to meet with Bondi’s DOJ, and every one of them did so.

Asked whether she’d like to apologize for such an oversight, Bondi then started talking over Jayapal, repeatedly saying that she should ask Biden’s AG, Merrick Garland, instead. She never once glanced back at the victims and eventually ended up at: “I’m not gonna get in the gutter for [Jayapal’s] theatrics.” The Epstein victims remained in their seats, unacknowledged.

Even for Bondi, this was an eye-opening performance.

“The Dow is over $50,000!” she yelled at one point, before adding, after the shocked laughter of Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), “I don’t know why you’re laughing! You’re a great stock trader, as I hear, Raskin… That’s what we should be talking about!”
Indeed, indeed, that is what we should be talking about. Sure, we could ask about emails that describe children — possibly as young as 9 years old — being sexually abused on a secret pedophile island visited frequently by international elites. Emails that say things like “loved the torture video”. Emails that should have been released long ago, that the president promised to release as soon as he came into power about, and that for some reason he just…didn’t, until they started appearing anyway, still heavily redacted. But why not instead discuss EMAILS ABOUT HOW MY SHARES IN BOEING ARE UP, AMIRITE, PAM?!

At one point during the hearing, exasperated by the fact that Bondi wouldn’t even directly answer a question about whether it’s important to protect the identities of sexual assault victims, Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) said, “You do a kind of Jekyll and Hyde routine over here.” Bondi immediately tried to drag him into a back-and-forth about what Jekyll and Hyde “means” (I’m going to charitably assume here that she is aware of the book) and we never really got to the bottom of anything else. For what it’s worth, Johnson had been asking whether Bondi believed that the identities of sexual assault victims should be fully protected.



There are vital questions that the American public needs transparency, needs substantive answers on. Instead, what do we get? Accusations of Trump Derangement Syndrome, name calling, you’re a loser lawyer, this and that. I mean, coming from the AG of the United States . . . did we get any meaningful clarity on the Epstein investigations on Epstein files? To your point, do the victims feel, to what you were saying earlier, like they’ve been given any transparency, any clarity on any of this? Have we learned anything new about what DOJ is doing to investigate in Minnesota? Have we learned anything new about the search warrant in Fulton County? Have we learned anything new about the fact that dozens of judges across this country have found that this DOJ lacks credibility? No, it’s been name calling. It’s been amateurish. It’s an embarrassment to the Justice Department what we’re seeing from Pam Bondi.


 MORNING JOE today has already noted Bondi's appalling performance. 



"We're laughing because she's making a fool ofherself." 

The Jayapal exchange revealed something else.  Remember Pam's binder?  Dan Manan (NBC NEWS) reports:

Attorney General Pam Bondi at a House Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday seemed to have a printout of Rep. Pramila Jayapal’s history of searches of the Department of Justice’s database of documents related to the notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Photos of a black binder that Bondi had at the hearing showed the words “Jayapal Pramila Search History” and a list of documents whose numbers coincide with the number of Epstein files.

Jayapal, a Washington state Democrat who sits on the Judiciary Committee, and other members of Congress have visited the DOJ in recent days to view documents related to Epstein that are not available to the public.

Jayapal blasted Bondi in a post on X on Wednesday evening.

“It is totally inappropriate and against the separations of powers for the DOJ to surveil us as we search the Epstein files,” Jayapal wrote.

“Bondi showed up today with a burn book that held a printed search history of exactly what emails I searched,” the congresswoman said.

“That is outrageous and I intend to pursue this and stop this spying on members.”

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., when asked by MS Now if Bondi’s alleged action was appropriate, at first said, “I’m not going to comment on an allegation that is unsubstantiated. I don’t know anything about it.”

“I haven’t seen or heard anything about that, but that would be inappropriate if it happened,” Johnson said.


Washington, D.C. (February 11, 2026)—Today, Rep. Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the House Committee on the Judiciary, issued the following statement after photographs revealed that Attorney General Pam Bondi has tracked the search history of Members of Congress who have reviewed the unredacted Epstein files at a satellite office of the Department of Justice:

"The Department of Justice has required Members of Congress who wish to review the slightly-less-redacted Epstein files to travel to a DOJ annex, sit at one of four DOJ-owned computers, use a clunky and convoluted software system provided by DOJ, and search for and read documents while DOJ staffers look over our shoulders. It is the perfect set up for DOJ to spy on Members’ review, monitoring, recording, and logging every document we choose to pull up.

“Today, photographs of Attorney General Bondi’s ‘burn book’ confirmed my suspicions. These photos show Bondi came to our hearing with a document entitled ‘Jayapal Pramila Search History’ and then listed the documents my colleague, Rep. Jayapal, reviewed while at DOJ, apparently to prepare the Attorney General for any questions Rep. Jayapal might ask.

“Not only has the Department of Justice illegally withheld documents from Congress and the American people. Not only has Attorney General Bondi failed to bring a single indictment against a single co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. But now Bondi and her team are spying on Members of Congress conducting oversight in yet another blatant attempt to intrude into Congress’s oversight processes.

“It is an outrage that DOJ is tracking Members’ investigative steps undertaken to ensure that DOJ is complying with the Epstein File Transparency Act and using this information for the Attorney General’s embarrassing polemical purposes. DOJ must immediately cease tracking any Members’ searches, open up the Epstein review to senior congressional staff, and publicly release all files—with all the survivors’ information, and only the survivors’ information, properly redacted—as required by federal law. I will also be asking the DOJ Inspector General to open an inquiry into this outrageous abuse of power. Let us use this humiliating disclosure about the Attorney General's work ethics to do a complete reset on the Epstein coverup.”   

 

###


The hearing was a disaster for Pam Bondi.  Sean James (MEDIAITE) notes:

Conservative radio host Erick Erickson said Attorney General Pam Bondi should quit or be canned after she said lawmakers and American citizens should be celebrating the stock market “smashing records,” rather than being fixated on the files tied to Jeffrey Epstein.

Erickson shared his disgust with Bondi’s answer in a post on X on Wednesday.

“When the Attorney General of the United States is asked why she has prosecuted no one related to Jeffrey Epstein and this is her answer, she should be fired or resign,” he posted. “But neither will happen, which is another reason the Democrats are going to have a good election year.”


Let's note another moment from the hearing. 



US House Rep Jasmine Crockett: And to be clear, I'm not going to ask any questions of this witness because this witness has revealed she has no intentions of answering questions.  But instead I'm going to ask some very basic questions really quickly of my colleague Becca Balint if she will answer.  Right or wrong, raping children?

US House Rep Becca Balint: Wrong.

US House Rep Jasmine Crockett: Right or wrong, killing random citizens?

US House Rep Becca Balint: Definitely wrong.

US House Rep Jasmine Crockett  Right or wrong, enriching yourself as the sitting president of the United States? 

US House Rep Becca Balint:  Definitely wrong. 

US House Rep Jasmine Crockett: Okay, thank you because I probably never would have got that with our witness.  Our witness who somehow is a lawyer but doesn't understand how it works with witnesses.  I'm not really sure what law school she went to and what all kind of cases she tried but typically when you come into a space and somebody's a witness then they sit there and they answer questions instead of asking questions.  And then we also have this objection that we use as lawyers called non-responsive when a witness fails to actually answer the question.  But nevertheless, let me address the survivors because that's exactly who they are.  They are not victims. They are survivors.  Let me say thank you for having more courage and more moral clarity in your pinky fingers than the entire Department of Justice.  We are currently the laughing stock of the world partially because of the failed leadership within the DOJ as we see kings and queens fallen everywhere around the world but we don't know the basics of right and wrong in this country because it's not about partisanship.  And that's why I applaud [US House Rep] Thomas Massie because he's the only person on the Republican side that has a backbone and knows how to stand up to corruption. But nevertheless let me keep going.  My Democratic colleagues have been attacked this entire Committee hearing.  They have been lied on.  And frankly the American people weren't looking for that.  They were looking for answers about the corruption that they see coming from this administration.  In the written testimony of this witness -- of this particular witness -- she stated that when she took office, she had main goals.  The first was to end the weaponization of justice and, second, to return the department to its core mission.  Not only have you lied about both, you've intentionally done the exact opposite.  You're spending more taxpayer resources arresting journalists than you are prosecuting pedophiles and creeps.  In fact, your boss, the president of the United States, stated that this administration "took the freedom of speech away" and at your direction DOJ has arrested Don Lemon and Georgia Fort and I might add that ya'll actually had a judge that rejected ya'll for trying to arrest Don Lemon before just like the grand jury rejected ya'll as it relates to Senator Kelly -- just like a grand jury rejected ya'll as it relates to Senator [Elissa] Slotkin -- just like the case against Tish James was dismissed and the case against Mr. [James] Comey was dismissed.  I completely don't get how it is that you're sitting at the top of DOJ because you don't seem to be good at your job.  You're spending more tax payer resources arresting these journalists.  In fact, we know after Georgia Fort and Don Lemon were arrested, we know that there were homes of journalists that were raided.  We know that threatened prosecution against students protesting your actions and forced tech companies to remove apps used to track ICE's activities.  But let's circle back to you protecting pedophiles and creeps. because I want to talk about the president and his possible involvement with Jeffrey Epstein.  Now I don't know what the president might have done with Jeffrey Epstein but unlike this administration, I believe the facts matter so let's talk about the facts. Fact number one, Donald Trump is one of the most named people in the Epstein files.  At least 5,000 files contain more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife or Mar-a-Lago.  Fact number two, Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell made young girls available to Trump on multiple occasions.  For example, according to this file, Ghislaine Maxwell presented a young girl to President Trump who spent more than 20 minutes apparently flirting with her.  Here's another example: this shows notes from FBI investigators that describe Jeffrey Epstein transporting a victim to Mar-a-Largo to meet with President Trump where he bragged to Trump that, "This is a good one." Now I'm not saying that the president is a pedophile but there is a lot of evidence in these files that suggest he's very close friends with a lot of men who are pedophiles. What's crazy about all of this is just that this is a big cover up and this administration is engaged in it. In fact, this administration is complicit.  But there are numerous others like how the DOJ is attempting to obstruct justice in the investigation of the rogue agents who have murdered American citizens.  Or how the DOJ seized voter data from Fulton County in an attempt to steal the 2026 mid-term elections or how federal agent have Tom Homan on tape accepting a bribe and your agency killed the investigation.  Or how your agency is willing to give the president a $230 million payday which is unconstitutional.  The Constitution is clear: "The president shall not receive any payment except his salary while in office." The fact of the matter is that you will be remembered as one of the worst attorney generals in history -- an attorney general who has prioritized obstruction over justice, corruption over the law, fealty  to the president over loyalty to the Constitution.  And, Mr. Chairman, I will yield.  

After the hearing concluded, the Democrats on the House Committee issued the following:

Washington, D.C. (February 11, 202)—Today, during her oversight hearing before the House Judiciary Committee, Attorney General Pam Bondi refused to answer basic questions, aggressively filibustering and resorting to ad hominem attacks that revealed the depth of her incompetence and incredibility. 

Here are the questions the Attorney General refused to answer before Congress, amid nationwide calls for truth and transparency: 

  1. Bondi refused to answer how many of Epstein’s co-conspirators her DOJ has indicted (zero).   
     
  2. Bondi refused to answer whether she would create a joint task force to give state attorneys general and district attorneys around the country access to DOJ’s trove of evidence regarding Epstein and his co-conspirators, so they can go build the cases and bring the indictments DOJ refuses to pursue.
     
  3. Bondi refused to answer whether the email from the Epstein files involving Steve Tisch is worthy of further investigation.   
     
  4. Bondi refused to answer whether it’s important for prosecutors to protect sexual assault victims’ identities.
     
  5. Bondi refused to answer why 500 of her attorneys somehow didn’t redact dozens of survivors’ names, identities, and sensitive photographs.
     
  6. Bondi refused to answer why she refused to investigate Prince Andrew who is shown in disturbing photos in the Epstein files.  
     
  7. Bondi refused to answer whether she has knowledge if President Trump was at parties with underage girls.  
     
  8. Bondi refused to answer whether she has prepared a list of so-called domestic terrorism groups. And she refused to commit to providing the committee with that list.  
     
  9. Bondi refused to answer when DOJ decided not to investigate Lex Wexner as a co-conspirator and why.  
     
  10. Bondi refused to answer whether DOJ owes anything to Epstein’s victims, even as Donald Trump sues for $10 billion in personal damages from the federal government. 
     
  11. Bondi refused to answer how many employees work at the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team (which she eliminated).
     
  12. Bondi refused to answer whether DOJ has questioned Secretary Lutnick and other Administration officials about their ties to Epstein.  
     
  13. Bondi refused to answer who at DOJ signed off on Ghislaine Maxwell’s transfer.
     
  14. Bondi refused to answer whether her Department would consider recommending a pardon for Ghislaine Maxwell. 
     
  15. Bondi refused to answer whether the President has lied when he spread a crazy right-wing conspiracy theory about the murder of Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman. 






Moving over to the topic of ICE . . . 


At ABOVE THE LAW, Jonathan Wolf writes:


I know a little place where the ingredients are always fresh. You can get a mega-burrito and a Dos Equis to wash it down for not much more than 10 bucks.

If you’re in a bad mood when you arrive, you won’t be for long, because the workers smile, they laugh, they seem like they’re having so much fun making your food just the way you like it that you can’t help but start to feel like you’re having a little fun yourself. When I’m in there with my parents, the staff are careful to treat them (and any other older people) with respect. Someone always comes around from behind the counter to carry my mom’s food to her table for her.

Last week my favorite burrito shop was dark. The door was locked. A note posted outside indicated that they would be closed for the foreseeable future for kitchen renovations.
No mention had been made of upcoming renovations at any of my prior visits though. With ICE known to be skulking about, it didn’t exactly take Sherlock Holmes to figure out what had really happened.

Immigration agents reportedly kidnapped several of the employees and are in the process of deporting them. I confirmed this as best I could, which basically meant asking people in the area what they had heard, because the Department of Homeland Security generally won’t tell taxpayers (their bosses) who they are taking or what they are doing with them.

I say “kidnapped” because this most definitely was not an “arrest” and there is no better word for what actually took place. When a police officer takes another person into custody, he or she is acting under the color of legal authority. This police officer must respect the constitutional rights of the accused, and must have probable cause indicating that the person being arrested has committed a crime. When police officers make arrests, their badges and the badge numbers on them are visible, their last names are stitched into their uniforms, and their faces are uncovered, so that if your rights are indeed violated while you are in custody, you know who to complain about later on. When a police officer goes beyond the legal authority with which he or she is entrusted, that police officer is subject to disciplinary action, civil liability, or even criminal prosecution.

The color of someone’s skin or the fact that they speak English with an accent does not amount to probable cause. Simply being an undocumented immigrant is not even, on its own, a crime.
The president — who has himself been convicted of far more serious crimes than almost all of the people his administration is deporting — calling some thug a police officer does not make him one. Masked, unaccountable, unidentifiable ICE agents who trample the constitutional rights of every person they encounter are not law enforcement. One cannot enforce the law by breaking the law, and the Constitution is the supreme law of the land. These are kidnappings, plain and simple.


Plain and simple.  And let's call it what it is.  The American people are exhausted by Chump's lies on immigration.  Natasha Korecki (NBC NEWS) notes:

Support for President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda is in free fall in early 2026 after federal immigration agents shot and killed two Americans last month, according to the new NBC News Decision Desk Poll powered by SurveyMonkey.

The administration’s aggressive tactics and deportation goals have dragged down Americans’ views of Trump on the very issue that helped sweep him into office, the survey shows.
Immigration and border security had long stood out as a strength for Trump in polls, both as he ran for a second term in 2024 and in the first year of his new administration. Now, Trump’s ratings on the issue have sunk to the same level as his overall job approval rating.
In a double-digit shift, 49% of adults strongly disapprove of how Trump has handled border security and immigration, up from 38% strong disapproval last summer and 34% in April. Self-identified independents drove the erosion, with the share of strong disapprovers in that group having risen 11 points since August.

Fully 60% of those surveyed in the week after the death of Alex Pretti in Minnesota somewhat or strongly disapproved of Trump’s actions on border security and immigration. Another 40% approved of Trump on the issue, including 27% who strongly approved and 13% who somewhat approved.
Meanwhile, his overall approval rating declined slightly to 39%, about even with his rating on immigration and border security.


Ryan J. Foley (AP) reports on some serious issues with ICE:

Investigators said one immigration enforcement official got away with physically assaulting his girlfriend for years. Another admitted he repeatedly sexually abused a woman in his custody. A third is charged with taking bribes to remove detention orders on people targeted for deportation.
At least two dozen U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement employees and contractors have been charged with crimes since 2020, and their documented wrongdoing includes patterns of physical and sexual abuse, corruption and other abuses of authority, a review by The Associated Press found.

While most of the cases happened before Congress voted last year to give ICE $75 billion to hire more agents and detain more people, experts say these kinds of crimes could accelerate given the sheer volume of new employees and their empowerment to use aggressive tactics to arrest and deport people.
The Trump administration has emboldened agents by arguing they have “absolute immunity” for their actions on duty and by weakening oversight. One judge recently suggested that ICE was developing a troubling culture of lawlessness, while experts have questioned whether job applicants are getting enough vetting and training.
“Once a person is hired, brought on, goes through the training and they are not the right person, it is difficult to get rid of them and there will be a price to be paid later down the road by everyone,” said Gil Kerlikowske, who served as commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection from 2014 to 2017.

Foley notes specific cases from last year and this year:

Arrests of ICE personnel over the last year have been a headache for the agency, which has labeled many of the people they deport as the “worst of the worst” because of their rap sheets.

The AP found at least nine such arrests across the country. They include the assistant ICE field office supervisor in Cincinnati, who has been jailed since December after a judge found he was a danger to the public who had violently assaulted his girlfriend for years.

Two ICE employees in Minnesota faced federal sexual misconduct charges related to underage girls last year, including an employment eligibility auditor arrested in a sting operation in November. The auditor has pleaded not guilty. An ICE investigator in the state pleaded guilty to sending images and videos of himself having sex with a 17-year-old girl, whose background he searched in a law enforcement database.
Two ICE agents face charges for incidents that occurred outside Chicago while they were off-duty but which involved their agency work. One was charged last month with assaulting a protester who was filming him at a gas station. Another was cited for driving drunk shortly after leaving work at a detention center with his government firearm in the vehicle.
The AP’s review found a pattern of charges involving ICE employees and contractors who mistreated vulnerable people in their care.

A former top official at an ICE contract facility in Texas was sentenced to probation on Feb. 4 after acknowledging he grabbed a handcuffed detainee by the neck and slammed him into a wall last year. Prosecutors had downgraded the charge from a felony to a misdemeanor.

In December, an ICE contractor pleaded guilty to sexually abusing a detainee at a detention facility in Louisiana. Prosecutors said the man had sexual encounters with a Nicaraguan national over a five-month period in 2025 as he instructed other detainees to act as lookouts.

Let's wind down with this from Senator Adam Schiff's office:


Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senators Adam Schiff and Alex Padilla (both D-Calif.) joined Senators Tim Kaine (D-Va.) and Peter Welch (D-Vt.) in leading a letter to U.S. Secretary of State and National Security Advisor Marco Rubio pushing the Trump administration to immediately end deportation flights to Iran. 

Last month, it was reported that the administration resumed the deportation of dozens of Iranians, many of whom could be persecuted, tortured, or even executed if they are forced to return to Iran. That reporting came amid massive demonstrations in Iran, the Iranian government’s violent crackdown on protesters, and threats from President Donald Trump to use U.S. military force against the current Iranian regime. 

“Given Iran’s horrific human rights record, we are deeply concerned that the Trump administration is returning people to a country where they may be persecuted or tortured, in violation of U.S. and international law,” the Senators wrote. “As you know, the United States has long been a safe haven for Iranians fleeing oppression and persecution by the Iranian regime because of their political ideology, religious beliefs, or sexual orientation. In the eyes of the regime, some of these ‘crimes’ are punishable by death, and deportees have stated they’ll likely face such sentences if sent back to Iran.” 

The Senators continued, “…despite your acknowledgement of the Iranian government’s wanton disregard for basic human rights, the Trump administration has chosen to return Iranian citizens to the very place that they fled for their lives.” 

“Throughout your career in the Senate, you were an advocate for Cubans escaping oppression and persecution by the Castro regime and for the protection of political dissidents and religious minorities around the world. We were glad to work with you on these issues,” the Senators concluded. “Now we ask you and the Trump administration to ensure that the United States does not violate U.S. and international law by returning people who have a well-founded fear of persecution and torture by the brutal Iranian regime.” 

In addition to Schiff, Padilla, Kaine, and Welch, the letter was cosigned by Senators Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Mark Warner (D-Va.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Jeffrey Merkley (D-Ore.), Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.), Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), and Cory Booker (D-N.J.). 

The full text of the letter is available here and below: 

Dear Secretary Rubio, 

In late September, the media and Iranian American human rights advocates began reporting that the Trump administration had reached a deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran to deport Iranian citizens back to Iran. According to these reports, the administration sent 45 people to Tehran via Qatar in late September or early October. Some of these individuals stated that they “begged not to be sent to Iran because they feared for their lives.” Once they landed in Tehran, they said that they were “made to fill out forms explaining why they had left Iran and sought asylum in America,” and were “called in for interrogation by the intelligence wing of the Revolutionary Guards Corps.” On December 7, 2025, the administration deported another approximately 50 Iranian citizens to Iran, this time through Kuwait. On January 25, yet another flight deported approximately 14 Iranians; the number would have been much higher if not for a major measles outbreak at the detention site and widespread bipartisan pushback. 

Given Iran’s horrific human rights record, we are deeply concerned that the Trump administration is returning people to a country where they may be persecuted or tortured, in violation of U.S. and international law. As you know, the United States has long been a safe haven for Iranians fleeing oppression and persecution by the Iranian regime because of their political ideology, religious beliefs, or sexual orientation. In the eyes of the regime, some of these ‘crimes’ are punishable by death, and deportees have stated they’ll likely face such sentences if sent back to Iran. 

Iran’s violations of human rights are extensive, well-documented, and horrifying. Basic rights, like those of the freedom of expression, religion, and assembly are not only infringed upon – they are violently suppressed through torture, imprisonment, forced disappearances, and executions. You and others in the Trump administration spoke extensively about the horrors of the Iranian regime when attempting to justify the June 22, 2025, U.S. military strikes on Iran’s nuclear program. More recently, you personally have spoken against the regime’s violent suppression of protesters that experts believe have left more than 6,800 people dead – a figure that continues to climb. Yet despite your acknowledgement of the Iranian government’s wanton disregard for basic human rights, the Trump administration has chosen to return Iranian citizens to the very place that they fled for their lives. 

Throughout your career in the Senate, you were an advocate for Cubans escaping oppression and persecution by the Castro regime and for the protection of political dissidents and religious minorities around the world. We were glad to work with you on these issues. Now we ask you and the Trump administration to ensure that the United States does not violate U.S. and international law by returning people who have a well-founded fear of persecution and torture by the brutal Iranian regime.

###

The following sites updated: