Blog

  • Trump and Putin agree to an immediate ceasefire for energy infrastructure in Ukraine conflict – The Associated Press

    Trump and Putin agree to an immediate ceasefire for energy infrastructure in Ukraine conflict – The Associated Press

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed during a lengthy call Tuesday to an immediate pause in strikes against energy infrastructure in the Ukraine war, but the Russian leader stopped short of backing a broader 30-day pause in fighting that the U.S. administration is pressing for.

    The White House described it as the first step in a “movement to peace” that it hopes will include a maritime ceasefire in the Black Sea and eventually a full and lasting end to the fighting. But there was no indication that Putin has backed away from his conditions for a prospective peace deal, which are fiercely opposed by Kyiv. And shortly after the call ended, air raid alerts sounded in Kyiv, followed by explosions in the city. Local officials urged people to seek shelter.

    Putin during the call reiterated his demand for an end to foreign military and intelligence assistance to Ukraine, according to the Kremlin. Trump, though, denied that the subject came up during an interview with Fox News on Tuesday.

    “We didn’t talk about aid,” Trump said. “We didn’t talk about aid at all.”

    Russia also wants Ukraine to pull back its troops from the four regions that Moscow has annexed but never fully captured, renounce any prospect of joining the NATO military alliance and sharply cut its army.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told reporters that Ukraine is open to any proposals that lead to a sustainable and just peace, but stressed the need for full transparency in discussions.

    In this combination of file photos, President Donald Trump, left, and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, center, are seen at the Elysee Palace, Dec. 7, 2024 in Paris, and President Vladimir Putin, right, addresses a Technology Forum in Moscow, Russia, Feb. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Aurelien Morissard, left and center, Pavel Bednyakov, right)

    In this combination of file photos, President Donald Trump, left, and Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, center, are seen at the Elysee Palace, Dec. 7, 2024 in Paris, and President Vladimir Putin, right, addresses a Technology Forum in Moscow, Russia, Feb. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Aurelien Morissard, left and center, Pavel Bednyakov, right)

    Zelenskyy said he was seeking more details on what Putin and Trump agreed on, but rejected Putin’s demand for halting military aid and intelligence sharing to Ukraine, warning that such a move would weaken Ukraine.

    “We need to understand what the conversation is about,” Zelenskyy said. “What are the details? And hopefully, we will be fully informed, and our partners will discuss everything with us.”

    He added: “There are two sides in this war — Russia and Ukraine. Trying to negotiate without Ukraine, in my view, will not be productive.”

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends a press conference following the meeting of Russian President Vladimir Putin and Tajik President Emomali Rahmon at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Monday, March 17, 2025. (Yury Kochetkov/Pool Photo via AP)

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends a press conference following the meeting of Russian President Vladimir Putin and Tajik President Emomali Rahmon at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Monday, March 17, 2025. (Yury Kochetkov/Pool Photo via AP)

    Ukrainian officials earlier this month proposed a ceasefire covering the Black Sea and long-range missile strikes and the release of prisoners.

    Trump immediately cheered Tuesday’s development as a major step toward his ultimate goal of ending the biggest land war in Europe since World War II.

    “We agreed to an immediate Ceasefire on all Energy and Infrastructure, with an understanding that we will be working quickly to have a Complete Ceasefire and, ultimately, an END to this very horrible War between Russia and Ukraine,” Trump said on social media.

    Putin also told Trump that Russia and Ukraine are set to exchange 175 prisoners of war each on Wednesday, and Russia will also hand over to Ukraine 23 badly wounded soldiers, the Kremlin said.

    The limited pause comes as Trump still hopes to get Russia to sign off on his 30-day ceasefire proposal aimed at ending the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

    “Peace to the world”, a painting created by Russian artist Alexei Sergienko showing a combination of faces of Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump, is on display at the Sergienko’s gallery in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, March 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky)

    Ukrainian officials last week agreed to the 30-day ceasefire proposal during talks in Saudi Arabia led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. White House special envoy Steve Witkoff then met with Putin in Moscow to discuss the proposal.

    Zelenskyy, however, remains skeptical that Putin is ready for peace as Russian forces continue to pound Ukraine.

    “This is not a game where only Putin dictates the rules,” Zelenskyy said, making clear he remains doubtful that Putin was serious about wanting peace.

    The Trump-Putin engagement is just the latest turn in dramatically shifting U.S.-Russia relations as Trump made quickly ending the conflict a top priority — even at the expense of straining ties with longtime American allies who want Putin to pay a price for the invasion.

    Trump has at moments boasted of his relationship with Putin and blamed Ukraine for Russia’s unprovoked invasion, all while accusing Zelenskyy of unnecessarily prolonging the biggest land war in Europe since World War II.

    Trump has said Washington and Moscow have already begun discussing “dividing up certain assets” between Ukraine and Russia as part of a deal to end the conflict.

    He said before the call that control of land and power plants would be part of the conversation, which came on the anniversary of Russia annexing Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula 11 years ago. That bold land grab by Russia set the stage for Russia to invade its neighbor in 2022.

    But neither the White House nor Kremlin made any mention of land or power plants in their post-call statements.

    Witkoff on Sunday suggested that U.S. and Russian officials have discussed the fate of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant — Europe’s largest — in southern Ukraine. Russian troops seized the plant early in the war and it has been caught in the crossfire, fueling fears of a potential nuclear catastrophe.

    The plant is a significant asset, producing nearly a quarter of Ukraine’s electricity in the year before the war.

    After a disastrous Feb. 28 White House meeting with Zelenskyy, Trump temporarily cut off some military intelligence-sharing and aid to Ukraine. It was restored after the Ukrainians last week signed off on the Trump administration’s 30-day ceasefire proposal.

    In his dealings with Zelenskyy and Putin, Trump has frequently focused on who has the leverage. Putin has “the cards” and Zelenskyy does not, Trump has said repeatedly.

    Trump, who has long shown admiration for Putin, has also made clear he’d like to see the U.S.-Russia relationship return to a more normal footing.

    The president during his recent contentious meeting with Zelenskyy grumbled that “Putin went through a hell of a lot with me,” a reference to the federal investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election in which he beat Democrat Hillary Clinton.

    Trump on Tuesday again underscored his view that Ukraine is not in a strong negotiating position. He said Russian forces have surrounded Ukrainian troops in Russia’s Kursk region — amplifying an assertion made by Russian officials that’s been disputed by Zelenskyy.

    “They are nicely encircled, and that’s not good,” said Trump, according to excerpts of an interview on Fox News Channel’s “Ingraham Angle.” “And we want to get it over with.”

    Ukraine’s army stunned Russia in August last year by attacking across the border and taking control of an estimated 1,300 square kilometers (500 square miles) of land. But Ukraine’s forces are now in retreat and it has all but lost a valuable bargaining chip, as momentum builds for a ceasefire with Russia.

    The White House said Trump and Putin also discussed the situation in the Middle East and agreed “Iran should never be in a position to destroy Israel.”

    U.S. officials have previously said that Iran has provided Russia with short-range ballistic missiles and attack drones for the war in Ukraine. The U.S. has also said that Iran has assisted Russia with building a drone-manufacturing factory.

    The Kremlin said that Trump also expressed support for an idea floated by Putin to organize hockey matches in the United States and Russia between Russian and American players from the National Hockey League, which has U.S. and Canadian teams, and the Kontinental Hockey League, which includes teams from Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and China.

    ___

    Isachenkov reported from Moscow. AP writer Hanna Arhirova in Kyiv contributed reporting.

  • Live updates: Trump speaks with Putin about ending Ukraine war; John Roberts denounces Trump’s call to impeach judge – NBC News

    Live updates: Trump speaks with Putin about ending Ukraine war; John Roberts denounces Trump’s call to impeach judge – NBC News

    Government releases latest batch of JFK assassination documents

    More than 60 years after President John F. Kennedy was gunned down in Dallas, the federal government began releasing what could be the final trove of documents delving into the assassination that shocked the nation and spawned countless conspiracy theories.

    The Justice Department’s National Security Division today started unveiling the long-awaited files a day after Trump announced that 80,000 pages related to the fatal Nov. 22, 1963, shooting were about to be released.

    “You got a lot of reading,” Trump said as he visited the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. “I don’t believe we’re going to redact anything.”

    Trump was cagey about what would be in the files. Historians contend that around 4,700 documents haven’t yet been released.

    Read the full story here.

    Congressional watchdog office left powerless as House leaders have yet to fill board seats

    Ryan Nobles

    Melanie ZanonaMelanie Zanona is a Capitol Hill correspondent for NBC News.

    Ryan Nobles and Melanie Zanona

    House leaders have yet to appoint board members to an independent office designed to investigate ethics complaints against lawmakers and their staff members, leaving the entity powerless for the time being and sparking concerns among outside watchdogs.

    The House rules package for the new Congress, which was approved in January along party lines, re-authorized the nonpartisan Office of Congressional Ethics and gave it a new name: the Office of Congressional Conduct.

    But more than two months later, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., who have the authority to fill the board seats, have yet to do so.

    Without a board in place, professional staff members are not authorized to launch investigations. If the seats remain unfilled by Saturday, it will mark the longest the office has had a vacant board since it was formed in 2008.

    Read the full story here.

    Nebraska Republican booed at town hall while talking about spending cuts

    Rep. Mike Flood, R-Neb, is facing a confrontational crowd tonight at a town hall in his district.

    “I believe that town halls are an important part of the process,” Flood said as he opened up the event in Columbus. “It’s democracy. It’s how we communicate with each other.”

    The event quickly turned more intense once the floor was opened up for questions. Flood, who is vice chair of the centrist-leaning Main Street Caucus, was met with loud boos when he said he supported spending cuts.

    “For the first time in decades, we have a president that is cutting spending and he is looking to find efficiencies,” Flood said. “And I support that effort.”

    He said he knows that “some of you in this room are angry” and repeatedly asked the crowd to let him finish answering its questions.

    “Tax the rich,” many members of the audience started chanting at one point.

    Flood is one of the few Republicans holding in-person events this week while Congress is in recess.

    Employees of African aid agency receive administrative leave notices

    Employees of the U.S. African Development Foundation began receiving notifications today that they had been placed on administrative leave, according to a copy of a notification obtained by NBC News.

    The letter from Pete Marocco, a top State Department official, referred to him as the acting chief executive officer and president of USADF. It informs recipients that they have been placed “on excused absence (also known as administrative leave) with pay, effective immediately,” and that they are prohibited “from entering ADF premises, accessing ADF systems, or attempting to use your position or authority with ADF in any way without my prior permission or the prior permission of a supervisor in your chain of command.”

    The notifications come less than two weeks after members of DOGE accessed the USADF offices and as DOGE gained access this week to the U.S. Institute of Peace. Meanwhile, a federal judge ruled today in a separate case involving DOGE and Marocco that the dismantling of USAID “likely violated the United States Constitution in multiple ways.”

    Last week, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon denied a request for a temporary restraining order to prevent Marocco, DOGE and others from removing Ward Brehm as president of USADF. Leon wrote that he would “closely scrutinize” whether DOGE employees took steps to maintain USADF to “the minimal presence and function required by law.” Leon’s motion for a preliminary injunction is due Friday, and a hearing is set for April 16.

    Trump fires both Democratic commissioners at the Federal Trade Commission

    Reuters

    The two Democratic commissioners at the Federal Trade Commission said they were illegally fired by Trump today in another major test of the independence of regulatory agencies.

    A White House official confirmed the firing but did not have further comment.

    “This is corruption plain and simple,” former Commissioner Alvaro Bedoya said of his firing in a statement on X.

    His former colleague Rebecca Kelly Slaughter said in a statement: “The President illegally fired me from my position as a Federal Trade Commissioner, violating the plain language of a statute and clear Supreme Court precedent.”

    Read the full story here.

    IRS whistleblowers in Hunter Biden probe get Treasury Department promotions

    Two investigators in the IRS’ criminal division, including the agent who opened a criminal probe into Hunter Biden’s taxes, have been promoted and hold new positions at the Treasury Department, according to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.

    The two men —Gary Shapley and Joseph Ziegler — are now senior advisers to Bessent. They will later transfer back to the IRS in leadership roles.

    Ziegler, who was the originating case agent investigating Biden’s taxes, testified at a hearing in July 2023 that there had been “gross mismanagement” involving the probe. He has suggested federal prosecutors turned a blind eye to some of the allegations against the president’s son.

    Shapley, testifying at the same hearing, said the Justice Department had given Biden preferential treatment.

    “We have been motivated by one singular mantra: do what’s right, and do it the right way,” Shapley and Ziegler said in a statement today. “It has not been easy, but having a clear conscience is worth the effort.”

    Bessent said in a separate statement: “These veteran civil servants join us to help further the agency’s focus on collections, modernization, and customer service, so we can deliver a more effective and efficient IRS experience for hardworking American taxpayers.”

    Grassley, who has often led congressional efforts to investigate the findings of Ziegler and Shapley, said, in part, that “if we reinstate whistleblowers who have been retaliated against, it will send a clear signal that pointing out wrongdoing is an honorable thing to do. It will help change the culture of our bureaucracy.”

    Ziegler’s investigation into Biden was used to produce a nine-count, 56-page indictment filed in federal court in California, which alleged Biden, former President Joe Biden’s son, committed significant tax crimes over several years.

    Biden pleaded guilty to those charges in federal court in September, sparing what could have been an embarrassing trial shortly before the 2024 election.

    The indictment said Biden “engaged in a four-year scheme to not pay at least $1.4 million in self-assessed federal taxes he owed for tax years 2016 through 2019, from in or about January 2017 through in or about October 15, 2020, and to evade the assessment of taxes for tax year 2018 when he filed false returns in or about February 2020.”

    Prosecutors also alleged that the returns Biden eventually filed were fraudulent and that they falsely claimed money he paid to an escort, a strip club and a pornographic website, as well as money he spent on a sex club membership fee and his daughter’s college tuition and rent, as business expenses.

    Before sentencing, Joe Biden pardoned his son.

    Trump admin considers giving up NATO command that has been exclusively American since Eisenhower

    Courtney Kube and Gordon Lubold

    For nearly 75 years, it has been a distinctly American responsibility to have a four-star U.S. general oversee all NATO military operations in Europe — a command that began with then-World War II hero and future president Dwight D. Eisenhower.

    But the Trump administration, according to two defense officials familiar with the planning and a Pentagon briefing reviewed by NBC News, is considering changing that.

    Read the full story here.

    Trump signs memo barring use of DEI-related language in materials promoting foreign service

    Zoë Richards and Caroline Kenny

    Trump signed a memo this afternoon that directs Secretary of State Marco Rubio to remove language about “Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility” from materials promoting foreign service.

    The memo says the federal government won’t use characteristics like race, religion, sex or national origin as part of recruitment or hiring or efforts to retain foreign service employees.

    The memo directs agencies to “identify and take appropriate action regarding any Foreign Service Officer who knowingly and willfully engaged in illegal discrimination.”

    Trump previously ordered an end to all DEI-related programs and activities in the federal government.

    An appeals court last week said the Trump administration could temporarily enact that ban. A lower court had blocked it.

    Trump signs executive order on state and local preparedness for cyberattacks and weather events

    Caroline Kenny and Raquel Coronell Uribe

    Trump signed an executive order on preparedness that aims to “empower” state and local communities when it comes to incidents like cyberattacks and weather events.

    The order would create a national register to identify, describe and measure risks to guide spending and planning.

    The White House said it would enable “state and local governments to better understand, plan for, and address the needs of their citizens.”

    How Congress could — but probably won’t — impeach a federal judge

    +2

    Frank Thorp V, Kyle Stewart and Lawrence Hurley

    Trump and his allies have been calling for the impeachment of U.S. District Judge James Boasberg after he blocked the deportation of migrants under the Alien Enemies Act. The push to get rid of Boasberg became more serious today when Trump himself weighed in and agreed.

    Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts issued a rare statement afterward, rebuking Trump and his allies for going after judges who rule against the administration.

    Indeed, Congress impeaches not to retaliate against judges who have issued rulings they disagree with but instead to remove judges who have committed crimes or been alleged to have taken part in bribery or other behaviors that would preclude them from doing their duties on the bench.

    Here’s a look at the history and process of impeaching judges.

    Read the full story here.

    Elon Musk and DOGE efforts to close USAID unconstitutional, agency systems must be restored, judge rules

    Gary Grumbach and Doha Madani

    A federal judge ordered the government to reinstate U.S. Agency for International Development systems today, ruling that the accelerated shutdown of the agency led by Elon Musk “likely violated the United States Constitution in multiple ways.”

    U.S. District Judge Theodore D. Chuang ordered Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to reinstate access to email, payment, security notification and all other electronic systems for all current USAID employees and contractors. He also ordered it to provide written confirmation of compliance to the court within seven days.

    “The court will require Defendants, within 14 days, to secure and submit a written agreement among all necessary parties that ensures that USAID will be able to reoccupy USAID headquarters at its original location, in the event of a final ruling in favor of Plaintiffs,” the order said.

    He also ordered DOGE and Musk not to take any action regarding USAID without the express authorization of a USAID official with legal authority to do so.

    Read the full story here.

    Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries seek to defuse tensions after shutdown clash and refocus on Trump’s agenda

    +2

    Sahil Kapur, Danté Stewart and Frank Thorp V

    After days of clashes within the party over last week’s government shutdown fight, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries D-N.Y., are trying to get back on the same page.

    During separate public appearances today, the two congressional Democratic leaders sought to return their focus to battling Trump and his agenda, particularly the potential Medicaid cuts his Republican allies in Congress are looking at in their party-line bill for taxes, immigration and other policy priorities.

    Read the full story here.

    Trump and Putin begin laying groundwork for a ceasefire in Ukraine as Russia agrees not to attack energy targets

    Astha Rajvanshi and Rebecca Shabad

    The White House said today that Trump and Putin have agreed that the process to reach a peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine would begin with an energy infrastructure ceasefire.

    “This conflict should never have started and should have been ended long ago with sincere and good faith peace efforts,” the White House said in a readout of the call between the two leaders.

    Read the full story here.

    Leavitt confirms Elon Musk’s Starlink is providing Wi-Fi at the White House

    +2

    Peter Alexander

    Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

    Peter Alexander, Tara Prindiville and Sydney Carruth

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt today confirmed reporting that Elon Musk’s satellite internet service Starlink is providing Wi-Fi around the White House campus, saying it was done to improve internet connectivity.

    “Just like the Biden Administration did on numerous occasions, the White House is working to improve WiFi connectivity on the complex,” Leavitt said in a statement this afternoon.

    The Starlink service at the White House is the latest expansion in the federal government’s reliance on the SpaceX-operated internet service provider. Musk, an unpaid Trump adviser who is overseeing the administration’s efforts to sharply downsize the federal government, owns and operates the company.

    Musk has been criticized for continuing to oversee his portfolio of private companies — many of which, including Starlink, have federal government contracts — while working in the federal government himself.

    Vance to serve as RNC finance chair concurrently with VP responsibilities, RNC says

    Vance will be the next Republican National Committee finance chair, the first time a sitting vice president has concurrently served in the role, the RNC announced today.

    Vance said in a statement that to “fully enact the MAGA mandate” and Trump’s vision, “we must keep and grow our Republican majorities in 2026.”

    Trump said in a statement that Vance would “do a fantastic job,” adding that “he knows how to fight and win tough races.”

    House minority leader signals support for Schumer amid shutdown backlash

    Kyle Stewart

    Sydney CarruthSydney Carruth is a digital assistant for NBC News.

    Kyle Stewart and Sydney Carruth

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., voiced his support this morning for his Senate counterpart, Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., as he faces mounting backlash within his party over his handling of the government funding fight last week.

    Schumer led a group of Democratic senators to vote in favor of a Republican-backed government funding bill Friday to avert a federal government shutdown. Schumer argued that advancing the bill, which opens the door for sweeping cuts to Medicaid and other entitlement programs, was less dangerous than allowing the government to shut down as the Trump administration aims to dismantle its workforce.

    Jeffries, despite having publicly urged Schumer and Senate Democrats to block the GOP funding bill, told NBC News today that “I do” support Schumer’s Senate leadership. The pair “had a good conversation” Sunday “about the path forward, particularly as it relates to making sure we all speak with one voice in the effort to stop these Medicaid cuts from ever being enacted into law,” he said.

    Schumer canceled several promotional events scheduled this week as part of his tour for his new book, “Antisemitism in America: A Warning.” His media team cited “security concerns” amid the backlash that followed Friday’s vote.

    Jeffries said today that his members remain united in their effort to fight back on potential Medicaid cuts.

    “You know, as House Democrats, we stand by our decision to oppose the Republican spending bill, because the partisan Republican spending bill that was not negotiated with Democrats, it was written by Donald Trump and House Republicans, would hurt families, hurt veterans and hurt seniors,” he said.

    Trump administration says it’s working to reinstate more than 24,000 fired federal workers

    +2

    Gary Grumbach, Jacob Soboroff and Megan Lebowitz

    The Trump administration says it is moving to reinstate more than 24,000 probationary workers it fired as part of its efforts to slash the federal workforce, court documents filed yesterday show.

    Officials at 18 departments and agencies submitted signed declarations detailing their teams’ efforts to rehire the fired workers to comply with court orders. Last week two federal judges ordered the administration to temporarily reinstate thousands of probationary workers who were fired.

    But many of the employees being reinstated won’t be getting right back to work; instead, they’ll be placed on administrative leave.

    Read the full story here.

    Trump administration makes IRS staffers who investigated Hunter Biden senior advisers

    The Treasury Department announced today that two IRS employees who investigated Hunter Biden for tax evasion will become senior advisers at the department.

    “I am pleased to welcome Gary Shapley and Joseph Ziegler to the Treasury Department, where they will help us drive much-needed cultural reform within the IRS,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.

    Bessent said Shapley and Ziegler will help to “further the agency’s focus on collections, modernization, and customer service, so we can deliver a more effective and efficient IRS experience for hardworking American taxpayers.”

    The Treasury Department claimed Shapley and Ziegler faced retaliation after they spoke publicly about their investigation of Biden and alleging in congressional testimony that he had received preferential treatment from the Justice Department.

    Democrats questioned whether a GOP-aligned organization was behind the testimony as part of an effort to target Biden, former President Joe Biden’s son. An FBI agent who oversaw the agency’s probe into Hunter Biden also rejected Shapley’s allegation that there was any interference.

    Hunter Biden pleaded guilty last year in the federal tax evasion case. Joe Biden eventually pardoned his son for those charges, as well as federal gun charges.

    Canadian actress says she was detained by ICE

    A Canadian actress says she experienced “inhumane” treatment after being detained by U.S. immigration officials while trying to cross the border from Mexico.

    Jasmine Mooney, whose credits include “American Pie Presents: The Book of Love,” said she was trying to renew her work visa when she approached the U.S. border near San Diego on March 3, but was denied entry and detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    “I was put in a cell, and I had to sleep on a mat with no blanket, no pillow, with an aluminum foil wrapped over my body like a dead body for two and a half days,” Mooney, who is also the co-founder of a health drink brand, told local San Diego news outlet KGTV

    Her story echoes those of German nationals and others who have found themselves unexpectedly detained as the Trump administration ramps up border enforcement and tightens immigration policies.

    Mooney said she and about 30 other people “were up for 24 hours wrapped in chains” as they were transferred to a private for-profit detention center in Arizona.

    “I have never in my life seen anything so inhumane,” Mooney said.

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection declined to tell KGTV why Mooney had been detained, citing privacy restrictions, but said the agency treats all travelers with integrity, respect and professionalism.

    Mooney, who is originally from Vancouver, returned to Canada over the weekend.

    “No one deserves to go through that, what I witnessed,” she said, according to Global News.

    DOJ refuses to answer some questions from the judge who blocked Alien Enemies Act deportations

    +2

    Gary Grumbach, Chloe Atkins and Dareh Gregorian

    The Justice Department on Tuesday refused to answer a number of questions from a federal judge who had demanded more information on deportations that were carried out under a rarely used wartime act.

    “The Government maintains that there is no justification to order the provision of additional information, and that doing so would be inappropriate,” the Justice Department said in a court filing responding to U.S. District Judge James Boasberg’s ruling that it provide him with more information.

    The filing, however, did include a declaration from an official with Immigration and Customs Enforcement answering some of the questions the judge had posed at a hearing Monday, at which he expressed frustration that the government had appeared to snub his order halting the deportations and its refusal to answer questions about its actions.

    Read the full story.

    White House says Trump-Putin call has ended

    A White House official told NBC News the call between Trump and Putin is over. The call lasted over an hour and a half.

    Chief justice pushes back against calls to impeach judges who rule against Trump

    WASHINGTON — Chief Justice John Roberts issued a rare statement rebuking Trump and his allies for calling to impeach judges who have ruled against the administration.

    “For more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision. The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose,” Roberts said in a statement.

    Trump allies have called for various judges to be impeached for blocking administration policies in the first months of his second term.

    Read the full story here.

    White House says Trump-Putin call still underway

    According to White House deputy chief of staff Dan Scavino, Trump’s call with Putin is still ongoing as of 11:32 a.m. — meaning it has been going on for over an hour and a half so far.

    Trump calls for impeachment of judge who ordered halt to Alien Enemies Act deportations

    Trump lashed out this morning at a federal judge who has ordered the administration to pause deportations under the rarely invoked Alien Enemies Act.

    Yesterday, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg questioned a government lawyer over the administration’s response to a weekend court order where he demanded that planes carrying deportees under the Alien Enemies Act be turned around. Deportees ultimately arrived in El Salvador, raising questions about the timing of the flights.

    “This judge, like many of the Crooked Judges’ I am forced to appear before, should be IMPEACHED!!!” Trump said in a Truth Social post. “WE DON’T WANT VICIOUS, VIOLENT, AND DEMENTED CRIMINALS, MANY OF THEM DERANGED MURDERERS, IN OUR COUNTRY.”

    It is unclear how the administration determined that the people deported are members of a Venezuelan gang. It is also unclear whether the deportees had any court hearings ahead of being deported.

    Trump did not explicitly name Boasberg in his post, but he appeared to be referring to the deportation case that the judge presides over.

    Trump’s allies have pushed for the impeachment of judges, with Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, saying over the weekend that would introduce legislation. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked about Elon Musk’s calls for impeaching judges and answered, “I have not heard the president talk about impeaching judges. I know you mentioned Mr. Musk’s tweet, but I have not heard the president of the United States ask that.”

    Justice Department lawyers scrambling to review JFK documents

    Lawyers in the Justice Department’s national security division worked all night to review hundreds of pages of classified documents set for release today related to the JFK assassination, a person familiar with the matter told NBC News.

    This was first reported by ABC News.

    Trump said yesterday that the files would be released today.

    A Justice Department spokesman did not immediately respond to NBC News’ request for comment.

    Trump in January signed an executive order directing the “full and complete release of records relating to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.”

    The Kennedy assassination has been a fixation among some of Trump’s closest supporters — Tucker Carlson, for example — including some who believe the CIA played a role.

    Social Security chief says he will ‘continue to make mistakes’ but vows to ‘learn from them’

    Leland Dudek, the acting commissioner of the Social Security Administration, outlined his vision for the agency in a lengthy memo to staff today, detailing exploratory efforts to implement artificial intelligence and boost anti-fraud efforts as Trump and his right-hand adviser Elon Musk have zeroed in on claims of widespread improper payments at the bureau.

    In the memo, which was shared with NBC News by a person who obtained it, Dudek apologized for having made mistakes, said he will continue to make more and pledged to learn from them.

    Read the full story here.

    Trump has been speaking to Putin since 10 a.m.

    Trump is still speaking to Putin, White House deputy chief of staff Dan Scavino said on X.

    “Happening Now—President Trump is currently in the Oval Office speaking with President Vladimir Putin of Russia since 10:00amEDT. The call is going well, and still in progress,” Scavino wrote at 10:54 a.m.

    Trump’s battle with court ramps up over deportation of Venezuelans

    The Trump administration is facing a growing legal battle as a federal judge is now questioning whether his order halting the deportation of undocumented migrants was ignored. The Justice Department is expected to answer key questions about the deportations of alleged Venezuelan gang members to a prison in El Salvador without due process. NBC’s Peter Alexander reports for “TODAY.”

    Indian prime minister, a Trump ally, joins Truth Social

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has joined Trump’s social media platform Truth Social, making him among the only world leaders to do so.

    It comes as India is also among the few countries to offer pre-emptive trade concessions to the U.S., hoping to avoid tariffs. Modi and Trump have a personal relationship that goes back years, and are seen as having similar worldviews, especially as the U.S. looks to India as a counter to China.

    In his first post on Truth Social, the Indian leader posted a picture of himself with Trump during the “Howdy Modi” rally in Houston during his 2019 visit to the U.S., saying he was “delighted” to join the platform.

    Modi has been making an effort to appeal to Trump supporters lately, including by appearing on Lex Fridman’s podcast, the link to which was shared by Trump yesterday. 

    FAA worker reinstated after judge’s order

    Charles Spitzer-Stadtlander, a probationary employee with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) who was fired Feb. 14 as part of the cuts pushed by the Department of Government Efficiency, was reinstated today, according to an email shared exclusively with NBC News. 

    Spitzer-Stadtlander was one of several employees who was working on a warning radar system for Hawaii to detect incoming missiles, through a program that was in part funded by the Defense Department. The program was part of the FAA’s National Airspace System Defense Program and involves radars providing longer-range detection around the nation’s borders.

    The email states that the Transportation Department is “rescinding” Spitzer-Stadtlander’s “probationary/trial period termination” and explains that the department is taking this action to be “in compliance with the order issued March 13 by the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland.” The email goes on to say he will be “reinstated with pay and benefits” to his previous position and will receive backpay for the period in which he was previously terminated. 

    Spitzer-Stadtlander told NBC News he plans to return to his job.

    “I’m returning to my job because I love serving the American people and working for national security. It’s an honor of my lifetime,” he said. “I want to be able to do my job without chaos and uncertainty. Public service and national security are not places for politics or instability.”

    “Though I’m glad to be reinstated, it’s important to remember that two courts found that the termination of probationary employees en masse and for a false reason of poor performance was unlawful,” he added. “What happened was incredibly hurtful and traumatic. But since I work for the American people and in service of the mission, that’s all that matters and all that I’m keeping my focus on.”

    Spitzer-Stadtlander declined to answer how his case will move forward as he has a pending appeal related to his initial termination.

    Trump admin asks for reversal of judge’s temporary restraining order over the use of the Alien Enemies Act

    Gary Grumbach and Megan Lebowitz

    The Trump administration is asking a federal judge to reverse his decision to block the president’s use of the Alien Enemies Act to deport immigrants.

    The move, which came in an overnight filing, is the latest development in the legal battle over whether the administration can deport alleged gang members using the authority of a rarely invoked act.

    The administration argued in the filings that the “court lacks jurisdiction” over the claims of the Venezuelan plaintiffs, and that those suing the administration “have not shown the requisite irreparable harm.”

    “The alleged harms to Plaintiffs are overwhelmingly outweighed by the President’s interest in using his statutory and constitutional authority to address what he has identified as an invasion or predatory incursion by a group undertaking hostile actions and conducting irregular warfare,” the filing said.

    The judge had previously ordered any flights carrying deportees subject to Trump’s proclamation to turn around, but it was later revealed that the planes had arrived in El Salvador, raising questions about the timing of the flights and custody handover.

    Poll: Majority of Americans want U.S. to help Ukraine regain territory seized by Russia

    More than half of Americans want the U.S. to help Ukraine regain territory it has lost since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, even if that means prolonging the conflict, new research shows.

    An opinion poll from Gallup released this morning found 53% of respondents support the U.S. aiding Ukraine’s defense efforts, compared to 45% who want a quick end to the conflict even if that means conceding land to Russia.

    Trump has sharply turned U.S. away from former President Joe Biden’s policy of pledging huge financial and military aid to Ukraine, claiming that he actively supports neither side and is working toward a peace deal. A national NBC News poll found yesterday that a majority of Americans, 61%, support Ukraine over Russia and that most believe Trump favors Russia.

    “Looking ahead, this increase in public preference for stronger U.S. involvement may pressure the Trump administration to recalibrate its Ukraine policy, especially if Russia violates potential ceasefire agreements,” Gallup said in its analysis of the figures.

    Yesterday’s Gallup poll also showed that a record number of people believe the U.S. isn’t doing enough to help Ukraine in its war effort; 46% said assistance wasn’t enough, a rise of 16 points since December, in a sign some voters are turning against Trump’s self-described neutral stance.

    Support for Ukrainian aid is highest among Democrats and independent voters, but the 56% of Republicans who feel the U.S. is doing too much to help Ukraine is a fall of 11 points in the last three months.

    Gallup’s research was carried out between March 3 and 11, after the chaotic and divisive meeting between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Trump and Vice President JD Vance on Feb. 28. That meeting was scheduled to discuss a possible rare-earth minerals deal between the countries but ended in acrimony as the American leaders chastised Zelenskyy for not showing enough gratitude for the billions of dollars in U.S. support to date.

    Trump’s call with Putin will discuss what Ukraine will have to give up

    Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, Kyiv’s NATO aspirations and land will likely be on the table this morning when Trump tries to convince Russian President Vladimir Putin to accept a ceasefire in the war in Ukraine.

    The two leaders are set to speak on a phone call scheduled for between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. ET that will go on for “as long as they deem necessary,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said today.

    Read the full story.

    State Department restores funding for Afghan women studying in Oman

    Abigail Williams

    The State Department has reauthorized scholarship funding for Afghan women studying in Oman who said they faced persecution by the Taliban if their program was canceled and they were deported to Afghanistan.

    Last Wednesday, the U.S. government authorized the continuation of funding to the American University of Afghanistan and Texas A&M University until June 30, a State Department spokesperson said. It is unclear whether funding would then be further extended for the program, which is administered by the U.S. Agency for International Development.

    The women had appealed for urgent help to allow them to continue their studies abroad, saying that their return to Afghanistan, where the Taliban has severely curtailed women’s rights, “would mean the permanent loss of our education and exposure to severe risks, including oppression, insecurity, and a future without opportunities.”

    Gabbard retweets pro-Russia commentator praising the gutting of Voice of America

    Dan De Luce and Yixuan Tan

    Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence, has retweeted a post by a far-right commentator who praised the dismantling of Voice of America and other U.S. government-funded news outlets.

    Ian Miles Cheong, a contributor to the Russian state media outlet RT, claimed that Voice of America, Radio Free Asia and other outlets run by the U.S. Agency for Global Media “produced and disseminated far-left propaganda, including media hostile to conservatives in Central European countries such as Poland, Slovakia and Hungary” and perpetuated “pro-war narratives against Russia.”

    The U.S. Agency for Global Media, an independent U.S. government agency, was one of seven entities Trump designated for elimination in an executive order last Friday, in a move critics said was a win for authoritarian regimes such as China, where state media cheered the decision to shut the outlets known for their reporting on issues such as human rights and religious freedom.

    Speaking earlier today, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson declined to comment on Chinese state media reports or U.S. domestic policy, but said “it is not a secret that those U.S. media outlets make biased reporting on China.”

    Poll: American voters are deeply divided over DEI programs and political correctness

    The issue of diversity, equity and inclusion programs is among the most tightly divided and polarizing questions in the United States, with wide gaps emerging along partisan and racial lines, according to the latest national NBC News poll.

    Trump has made dismantling DEI programs an early focus of his administration, and voters are split over the future of DEI programs in the workplace, with deep differences depending on their political party.

    Half of registered voters (49%) in the NBC News poll say DEI programs should be eliminated “because they create divisions and inefficiencies in the workplace by putting too much emphasis on race and other social factors over merit, skills and experience.”

    And 48% say DEI programs in the workplace should continue “because diverse perspectives reflect our country, create innovative ideas and solutions, encourage unity and make our workplaces fair and inclusive.”

    Read the full story here.

    Trump is expected to speak with Putin this morning

    +2

    Rebecca Shabad, Elyse Perlmutter-Gumbiner and Gabe Gutierrez

    Trump is expected to speak today with Putin as the United States tries to mediate a diplomatic solution to end Russia’s three-year war with Ukraine.

    “We have tremendous things to report tomorrow, speaking with President Putin of Russia to save some soldiers who are in deep trouble. They’re captured,” Trump told reporters yesterday afternoon.

    Trump said that “it’s a bad situation” in both Ukraine and Russia.

    “What’s happening in Ukraine is not good, but we’re going to see if we can work a peace agreement, a ceasefire and peace, and I think we’ll be able to do it. I’m speaking to President Putin tomorrow morning,” he said.

    He later posted on Truth Social, “Many elements of a Final Agreement have been agreed to, but much remain.”

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters at yesterday’s briefing that “we’ve never been closer to a peace deal than we are in this moment.”

    Trump said Sunday that he and Putin will discuss “land” and “power plants, because that’s a big question.”

    “But I think we have a lot of it already discussed, very much by both sides, Ukraine and Russia. We’re already talking about that, dividing up certain assets. They’ve been working on that,” Trump said.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said Putin can’t be trusted because Russia hasn’t stuck to its previous agreements with Ukraine. That was the message he communicated to Trump in late February when he clashed with Trump and Vice President JD Vance at the White House. Trump, meanwhile, recently threatened to ramp up sanctions on Russia until it reached a peace agreement.

    DNC makes first foray into Wisconsin Supreme Court race

    The Democratic National Committee has launched a six-figure investment in the Wisconsin Supreme Court race in support of liberal candidate Susan Crawford.

    The investment comes exactly two weeks ahead of the technically nonpartisan April 1 election that will determine the state Supreme Court’s ideological balance for the second time in two years and coincides with today’s kickoff of early voting.

    The DNC describes the move as the party’s earliest-ever electoral investment after a November election.

    Party officials said the investment, which will officially go to the Wisconsin Democratic coordinated campaign, is intended to help counter the millions of dollars spent so far by outside groups with ties to Elon Musk.

    “When I went to Wisconsin to knock doors last month, folks told me they don’t want billionaires like Elon Musk running our federal government and they certainly don’t want him buying our elections,” DNC Chair Ken Martin said in a statement. “After what I heard on the ground, we’re investing earlier than ever before. The best way to curb Elon Musk’s influence is to organize everywhere, win races, and stop him in his tracks.”

    The investment, which will also aid the Democratic candidate in the battleground’s state school superintendent race, will help fund grassroots organizing efforts aimed at phone and text banking to reach voters.

    The race features a face-off between Brad Schimel, a conservative state judge in Waukesha County who previously was the state’s Republican attorney general, and Crawford, a liberal state judge in Madison.

  • JFK files released by Trump administration related to assassination – CBS News

    JFK files released by Trump administration related to assassination – CBS News

    By

    Stefan Becket

    Managing Editor, Digital Politics

    Stefan Becket is a managing editor of politics for CBSNews.com. Stefan has covered national politics for more than a decade and helps oversee a team covering the White House, Congress, the Supreme Court, immigration and federal law enforcement.

    Read Full Bio

    / CBS News

    MLK, JFK assassinations documents coming

    Trump executive order on Martin Luther King Jr., JFK and RFK assassinations 05:01

    Washington — The Trump administration on Tuesday evening released tens of thousands of pages of government documents related to the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy Jr., weeks after President Trump ordered government agencies to unveil their JFK files to the public.

    The documents were uploaded by the National Archives and Records Administration, the agency responsible for housing the government’s collection of records related to the assassination. The Archives said Tuesday of the JFK files that “all records previously withheld for classification” have now been released.

    Shortly after taking office in January, the president took executive action to establish a process to declassify and release any remaining documents related to Kennedy’s killing, as well as the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. The order instructed the director of national intelligence and attorney general to present the president with a plan for the “full and complete release of records relating to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.” 

    Last month, the FBI said it had discovered roughly 2,400 records related to the assassination during a search stemming from Mr. Trump’s executive action.

    What’s in the newly released JFK files?

    Mr. Trump estimated the new files contain roughly 80,000 pages. CBS News has a team of reporters sifting through the records to identify what documents contain new information.

    Many of the records were expected to be unredacted versions of documents that have been released but partially obscured in the past.

    Various investigations into the JFK assassination over the years — some as recently as the 1990s — swept up classified information that dealt with intelligence gathering methods and friendly foreign governments but were not directly linked to the assassination. Portions of documents, and some entire records, had remained classified for decades to protect sources and methods.

    David Barrett, a professor of political science at Villanova University who studies the Kennedy presidency, told CBS News ahead of the release that he expected many of the unclassified redactions to reveal “names of people, names of countries, references to how we gathered [intelligence]” and other details that had been kept secret at the request of intelligence agencies over the years for various reasons.

    “I don’t expect earth-shaking information, either with regard to the assassination or more broadly,” Barrett said. “But, you know, you never know.”

    Where to read the new JFK assassination files

    The documents have been uploaded to a portal maintained by the National Archives, which can be found here. The Archives maintains the government’s trove of records known as the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection.

    According to the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a nonprofit that compiles historical government records about the JFK assassination and other events, roughly 3,500 documents in the official collection contained redactions before the latest release. About 75% of those records were produced by the CIA. More than 500 other records were withheld from public release entirely.

    The Mary Ferrell Foundation runs its own JFK documents repository on its website, which has deeper search functions for exploring the trove of records. The group typically adds new documents shortly after they are released by the Archives.

    Why did Trump release these JFK files?

    Mr. Trump campaigned on declassifying and releasing records related to the JFK assassination, in part due to his political alliance with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has long called for more transparency about the assassinations that killed his uncle and father.

    In 1992, Congress passed a law requiring the government to release all of its records about the assassination by October 2017, while giving the president the authority to withhold records for national security reasons. In his first term, Mr. Trump unveiled thousands of documents, but some of their contents were kept under wraps after lobbying by the CIA and FBI. Other records were withheld altogether.

    Over the course of 2021 and 2022, President Joe Biden likewise released thousands of records but kept key portions redacted, frustrating researchers and observers who had called for their full release for years. 

    When was JFK assassinated?

    Kennedy was shot in the head on Nov. 22, 1963, at the age of 46 while riding in a convertible in Dallas, Texas. Lee Harvey Oswald, a former Marine and communist activist who had lived in the Soviet Union, was soon arrested for the killing. But Oswald was also shot and killed in the basement of the Dallas police headquarters two days later.

    An investigation led by Chief Justice Earl Warren concluded that Oswald acted alone in shooting Kennedy, but the probe has been widely criticized by academics and historians in the 62 years since the assassination.

    Oswald had been on the government’s radar before the assassination. He defected to the Soviet Union in 1959, and returned to the U.S. in 1962. A self-described Marxist, he worked with a pro-Fidel Castro activist group and had contact with Soviet and Cuban consulates in the months leading up to Kennedy’s death. 

    In October 1963, the CIA intercepted a phone call he made to the Soviet Embassy in Mexico City, though the full implications of the conversation remain unclear. Some additional documents related to that wiretap operation were released in 2022.

    Longtime JFK watchers have hoped that the documents that have been redacted or withheld by the government would reveal more information about Oswald’s activities in Mexico City and what else federal agencies knew about him before the shooting.

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

    Andres Triay contributed reporting.

    Stefan Becket

    Stefan Becket is a managing editor of politics for CBSNews.com. Stefan has covered national politics for more than a decade and helps oversee a team covering the White House, Congress, the Supreme Court, immigration and federal law enforcement.

    Twitter

  • A timeline of the legal wrangling and deportation flights after Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act – The Associated Press

    A timeline of the legal wrangling and deportation flights after Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act – The Associated Press

    By  NICHOLAS RICCARDI and REGINA GARCIA CANO

     

    An extraordinary legal showdown took place last weekend over President Donald Trump’s invocation of an 18th-century wartime act to deport hundreds of immigrants, most of them Venezuelans, to a prison in El Salvador.

    It involved a series of legal filings, White House announcements, court hearings, deportation flights and a mocking social media post from a Central American leader who proudly calls himself the ” world’s coolest dictator.”

    Here is a timeline of events surrounding the invocation of the Alien Enemies Act. All times are Eastern.

    Saturday, March 15

    __2:16 a.m.: Two legal advocacy groups — the ACLU and Democracy Forward — file suit on behalf of five Venezuelans held in immigration detention who fear they’ll be falsely labeled members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua and deported under the Alien Enemies Act, which lawyers expect to be invoked soon.

    __9:40 a.m.: Judge James E. Boasberg issues a temporary restraining order preventing the government from deporting the five plaintiffs. He schedules a 5 p.m. hearing on whether to expand it. The Trump administration swiftly appeals the order.

    __Roughly 4 p.m.: The White House posts the order invoking the Alien Enemies Act.

    __5 p.m.: Boasberg convenes a hearing and asks the government attorney, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Drew Ensign, if the government plans to deport anyone under Trump’s new proclamation “in the next 24 or 48 hours.” Ensign says he doesn’t know and asks for time to find out, as the ACLU warns planes are apparently about to depart. Boasberg gives Ensign about 40 minutes to find out and recesses the hearing at 5:22 pm.

    __5:26 p.m.: An airplane with the tail number N278GX, believed by activists to be carrying deportees, leaves Harlingen, Texas, near the border with Mexico, according to the flight tracking website FlightAware.

    __5:45 p.m.: Another airplane with the tail number N837VA, believed by activists to be carrying deportees, departs Harlingen.

    __About 5:55 p.m.: Boasberg reconvenes the hearing. Ensign says he still has no specifics. The ACLU again warns that planes are leaving. Boasberg says he has to issue a new order to avoid anyone being immediately deported.

    __Around 6:45 p.m.: Boasberg tells Ensign: “Inform your clients of this immediately, and that any plane containing these folks that is going to take off or is in the air needs to be returned to the United States.” He verbally issues his order, which stands for 14 days, and notes that immigrants protected by it will remain in U.S. custody.

    __7:26 p.m.: Boasberg’s written order is released.

    __7:36 p.m.: The plane with the tail number N278GX lands in Honduras.

    __7:37 p.m.: An airplane with the tail number N630VA, believed by activists to be carrying deportees, departs Harlingen. Government lawyers later say this plane held no one deported under the Alien Enemies Act.

    __8:02 p.m. The plane with the tail number N837VA lands in El Salvador.

    __9:46 p.m.: The plane with the tail number N630VA arrives in Honduras.

    __10:41 p.m.: The plane with the tail number N278GX departs Honduras.

    Sunday, March 16:

    __12:05 a.m.: The plane with the tail number N278GX arrives in El Salvador.

    __12:41 a.m.: The plane with the tail number N630VA leaves Honduras.

    __1:03 a.m.: The plane with the tail number N630VA arrives in El Salvador.

    __7:46 a.m.: El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, tweets a New York Post headline saying Boasberg had ordered planes turned around and adds “Oopsie … Too late” and a laughing/crying emoji.

    __8:13 a.m.: Bukele tweets footage of the deportees arriving and being processed into his country’s showcase prison.

    __8:39 a.m.: U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio posts Bukele’s tweet.

    __9:29 a.m.: White House Communications director recirculates Bukele’s laughing post

    Monday, March 17

    __5 p.m.: A hearing begins over what Boasberg has called the “possible defiance” of his court order. Trump administration lawyers tell Boasberg that his verbal directions did not count, only his written order needed to be followed, that it couldn’t apply to flights outside the U.S. and that they could not answer his questions about the trips due to national security issues. Boasberg calls the arguments “one heck of a stretch.” ACLU lawyer Lee Gelernt, the lead attorney for the plaintiffs, warns that “I think we’re getting very close” to a constitutional crisis.

    Tuesday, March 18

    __8:05 a.m.: Trump blasts Boasberg on his social media platform, Truth Social, for ruling against his deportation plans. “This judge, like many of the Crooked Judges’ I am forced to appear before, should be IMPEACHED!!!”

    __11:56 a.m.: Chief Justice John Roberts issues a rare public statement rejecting calls to impeach judges. “For more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision,” he writes. “The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose.”

    ___

    Associated Press writer Tim Sullivan contributed.

  • Trump releases classified files on JFK assassination. Here’s what they say. – USA TODAY

    WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump’s administration on Tuesday released what it said were all of the government’s classified files on the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy, making thousands of pages of records available to the public for the first time.

    The release of the files comes after Trump signed a day one executive order in January aimed at fully releasing government documents related to the assassinations of Kennedy, his brother and presidential candidate Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., and civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr.

    The contents of the documents, and whether any previously unreleased information is in them, wasn’t immediately clear. USA TODAY will continue reviewing the files and updating this story.

    “This could be a joke of a release, or it could be a breakthrough.  We just won’t know until we have time to process them,” said Jefferson Morley, author of the JFK Facts newsletter and three books on the CIA that portray the agency’s involvement in the events leading up to the assassination.

    The documents are not expected to change the long-held findings that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in assassinating Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963 while riding in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas.

    Some JFK documents touch on Lee Harvey Oswald theories

    Some of the documents also include references to various conspiracy theories suggesting that Oswald left the Soviet Union in 1962 intent on assassinating the popular young president.

    Department of Defense documents from 1963 covered the Cold War of the early 1960s and the U.S. involvement in Latin America, trying to thwart Cuban leader Fidel Castro’s support of communist forces in other countries.

    The documents suggest that Castro would not go so far as to provoke a war with the United States or escalate to the point “that would seriously and immediately endanger the Castro regime.”

    “It appears more likely that Castro might intensify his support of subversive forces in Latin America,” the document reads.

    – Reuters

    Part of Trump’s promise of ‘maximum transparency’ at the nation’s intelligence agencies

    Trump himself did not immediately post about the document release. But Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s director of National Intelligence, hailed their release, saying it was part of Trump’s promise for “maximum transparency and a commitment to rebuild the trust of the American people in the Intelligence Community (IC) and federal agencies.”

    Critics have long accused the intelligence community, and CIA in particular, of withholding potentially revelatory information about the case. Still, intelligence officials over the years have insisted that they have released everything important and that what’s left was withheld only to protect highly classified sources and methods of gathering intelligence and protecting sources.

    In a statement, Gabbard said that she immediately sent out a directive across the intelligence community after Trump’s Monday announcement ordering everyone to provide all unredacted records within the collection of documents about Kennedy’s assassination the national archives for immediate release.

    JFK file experts said those documents almost certainly have all been made public and viewed already, but with mostly minor redactions.

    Not all documents posted online Tuesday night

    The documents were released just before 7 p.m.

    The National Archives and Records Administration, the keeper of the documents, posted them with this statement:

    “In accordance with President Donald Trump’s directive of March 17, 2025, all records previously withheld for classification that are part of the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection are released.”

    The National Archives said it partnered with agencies across the federal government to comply with the President’s directive in support of Executive Order 14176. It said the records are available to access either online or in person, via hard copy or on analog media formats, at the National Archives at College Park, Maryland.

    “As the records continue to be digitized, they will be posted to this page,” the National Archives said, suggesting that not all of the documents were being released on Tuesday in digital form.

    The National Archives also said some information might still be withheld under court seal or for grand jury secrecy, and because some tax return information is subject to Internal Revenue Code prohibitions. 

    ‘People have been waiting for decades for this’

    The digital document dump came one day after Trump announced the files would be released during a visit to the  John F. Kennedy Center of the Performing Arts, which he’s taken over as board chairman.

    “People have been waiting for decades for this,” Trump told reporters.

    “We have a tremendous amount of paper. You’ve got a lot of reading,” Trump added. “I don’t believe we’re going to redact anything.”

    The CIA and Federal Bureau of Investigation, which were involved in JFK assassination investigations and in the document release, had no immediate comment.

    A mad Justice Department scramble to meet Trump’s deadline

    Trump’s order reportedly set off a scramble within the Justice Department’s National Security Division to meet Trump’s deadline, according to ABC News and Reuters.

    In an email just before 5 p.m. ET Monday, a senior official within DOJ’s Office of Intelligence said that even though the FBI had already conducted “an initial declassification review” of the documents, “all” of the attorneys in the operations section now had to provide “a second set of eyes” to help with this “urgent NSD-wide project.,” ABC News reported Tuesday.

    The process of releasing the files was set in motion on Trump’s first day in office on Jan. 20, when he signed an executive order aimed at fully releasing all government documents related to the assassinations of Kennedy, his brother and presidential candidate Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., and civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr.

    A new FBI tranche of 2,400 JFK records

    Last month, the FBI said it found some 2,400 new records linked to Kennedy’s assassination as well.

    The agency said it was in the process of passing the documents to the National Archives and Records Administration. It’s unclear what revelations, if any, are contained in the newly discovered files.

    Kennedy’s assassination has long been the subject of conspiracies after Oswald, the Marine veteran identified as Kennedy’s assassin, was shot and killed days later.

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s Health and Human Services secretary, has called for release of the files to see if any U.S. officials were involved in the assassination or potential coverup. Several U.S. investigations had found no such evidence.

    While millions of government records related to the Kennedy assassination have been previously released, some information remains classified and redacted. Trump said he instructed his director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, to oversee the release of the remaining files.

    A federal law passed in 1992 required the Kennedy assassination records to be fully released by Oct. 26, 2017 unless the president at the time determined their release would cause “identifiable harm” to the military defense, intelligence operations, law enforcement, or conduct of foreign relations of such gravity that it “outweighs the public interest in disclosure.”

    Trump was president when the 2017 deadline arrived. He ordered the release of nearly 2,900 records, but kept others secret because of concerns by the CIA and FBI that their release could hurt national security.

    Former President Joe Biden acted in 2021, 2022 and 2023 to give agencies more time to review the records.

    The documents released in 2017 included details on the FBI and CIA investigations into Oswald and information on covert Cold War operations.

    Josh Meyer is USA TODAY’s Domestic Security Correspondent. You can reach him by email at jmeyer@usatoday.com. Follow him on X at @JoshMeyerDC and Bluesky at @joshmeyerdc.bsky.social.

    Contributing: Ed Brackett, Joey Garrison