Category: Security

  • Trump administration says it did not defy court order on deportations

    The Trump administration says it did not defy a weekend court order to halt the use of wartime powers to fast-track deportations of alleged Venezuelan gang members to El Salvador.

    “The administration did not ‘refuse to comply’ with a court order,” said White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt in a statement. “The order, which had no lawful basis, was issued after terrorist (Tren de Aragua) aliens had already been removed from U.S. territory.”

    The question of President Donald Trump’s adherence to judicial checks is newly pertinent after the federal government flew 238 alleged members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua to El Salvador over the weekend despite a federal judge’s restraining order blocking the move for 14 days.

    In their appeal to the D.C. circuit court, Trump’s attorneys said they were notified of the judicial order on Sunday morning, after using powers granted by President Donald Trump’s executive order on Friday declaring that Tren de Aragua gang members had invaded the United States on behalf of the Nicolás Maduro regime in Venzuela. The order, citing the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a wartime detainment and deportation law rarely used in peacetime, allowed the administration to quickly expel immigrants from the country without going through the standard legal process.

    “Some gang members subject to removal under the Proclamation had already been removed from the United States territory under the Proclamation before the issuance of this Court’s second order,” wrote Deputy Attorney General Drew Ensign in the appeal.

    Leavitt, in her separate statement, also said the judge’s written order does not conflict with Trump’s executive order unleashing powers afforded by the Alien Enemies Act.

    “Moreover, as the Supreme Court has repeatedly made clear — federal courts generally have no jurisdiction over the president’s conduct of foreign affairs, his authorities under the Alien Enemies Act, and his core Article II powers to remove foreign alien terrorists from U.S. soil and repel a declared invasion,” Leavitt continued. “A single judge in a single city cannot direct the movements of an aircraft carrier full of foreign alien terrorists who were physically expelled from U.S. soil.”

    For weeks, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, special presidential envoy Richard Grenell and special envoy for Latin America Mauricio Claver-Carone negotiated with the governments of El Salvador and Maduro, who is serving as Venezuela’s president, to facilitate the removals, according to court documents.

    “The foreign policy of the U.S. would suffer harm if the removal of the individuals associated with TdA were prevented, taking into account … the possibility foreign interlocutors might change their minds regarding their willingness to accept certain individuals associated with TdA removed or might otherwise seek to leverage this as an ongoing issue,” wrote Michael G. Kozak, a senior Trump official in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, in a court filing Saturday.

    Trump allies have signaled they are itching for a fight with what they see as activist courts impeding the president’s prerogatives.

    A hearing before District Judge James Boasberg, who blocked the Trump administration Saturday evening from using the Alien Enemies Act to quickly deport Venezuelans, is scheduled for 5 p.m. Eastern time Monday.

    On Fox News Monday, border czar Tom Homan said the administration is planning more international deportation flights.

    “We’re not stopping, I don’t care what judges say, I don’t care what the left thinks, we’re coming,” said Homan.

    Critics of the administration stress that many of the alleged gang members could be denied due process without a trial. The American Civil Liberties Union, which brought the case before Judge James Boasberg on behalf of five Venezuelans threatened with deportation under the Alien Enemies Act, said several of their clients slated for deportation had been wrongly accused of being gang members

    “People on the flight sent to El Salvador had ZERO opportunity to contest the government’s evidence. Many said they were falsely accused of belong(ing) to Tren de Aragua,” posted Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at The American Immigration Council. “There was no due process at all.”

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    © 2025 Miami Herald.

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Multiple Teslas set on fire, shot in ‘targeted attack’

    Law enforcement officials are currently searching for a suspect who set multiple Teslas on fire and fired multiple gunshots into Tesla vehicles at a Tesla Collision Center In Las Vegas on Tuesday.

    During a Tuesday press conference, a las enforcement official confirmed that a “suspect approached the business wearing all black clothing” and “used what appear to be Molotov cocktails and a firearm to conduct his attack.”

    The law enforcement official noted that at least five Tesla vehicles were damaged by the suspect, with two of the vehicles “engulfed in flames” when police officials were notified of the incident at roughly 2:45 a.m. Police officials also said the suspect is believed to have fired at least three rounds into Tesla vehicles.

    The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department spokesperson said that the word “resist” was also painted on the door of the Tesla Collision Center when police officials arrived at the scene.

    During Tuesday’s press conference, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Assistant Sheriff Dori Koren described Tuesday’s incident as a “targeted attack against a Tesla facility, according to The Las Vegas Review-Journal.

    The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported that Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Special Agent in Charge Spencer Evans confirmed that Tuesday’s incident at the Tesla Collision Center remains under investigation by the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force.

    READ MORE: Videos/Pics: Trump issues major warning to ‘domestic terrorists’ attacking Tesla dealerships

    While Evans explained that it was too early to label Tuesday’s incident as an act of terrorism, the special agent in charge acknowledged that the incident had “some of the hallmarks” as well as a “potential political agenda.”

    During Tuesday’s press briefing, Evans said, “Violent acts like this are unacceptable, regardless of where they occur.” The FBI special agent in charge warned people thinking of carrying out similar attacks to “seriously reconsider” their actions.

    “It’s a federal crime,” Evans added. “We will come after you. We will find you and prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law.”

    According to The Las Vegas Review-Journal, while Evans confirmed that he was aware of other incidents against Tesla facilities and Tesla vehicles in different states, he could not yet confirm whether the incidents were connected.

    In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Tesla CEO Elon Musk shared the Las Vegas Review-Journal’s video of Tuesday’s attack alongside the caption, “This level of violence is insane and deeply wrong.” In the video, multiple Tesla vehicles can be seen engulfed in flames.

    Musk added, “Tesla just makes electric cars and has done nothing to deserve these evil attacks.”

    ABC 13 reporter Joe Moeller also shared videos and pictures from the scene of Tuesday’s “targeted attack.” The pictures and videos show multiple vehicles on fire and the word “resist” written in red letters across the entrance to the Tesla facility.


    Source: American Military News

  • Plane crashes into pickup truck, leaves 2 injured

    Two elderly men were injured on Tuesday after a small airplane crashed into a pickup truck at the Airport Manatee in Palmetto, Florida.

    In a Tuesday press release, the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office announced that deputies were working with the Federal Aviation Administration to investigate a plane crash that left two individuals injured in Florida. Law enforcement officials confirmed that the Federal Aviation Administration is currently “leading the investigation.”

    According to the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office press release, police deputies responded to “reports of a downed aircraft” at the Airport Manatee just prior to 10 a.m. on Tuesday.

    “Witnesses reported that the vintage single-engine Aeronca Champ experienced a problem shortly after takeoff,” the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office said in Tuesday’s press release. “The plane veered to the left, clipped a powerline, and then crashed into an unoccupied pickup truck parked nearby.”

    READ MORE: Pics: 5 injured in plane crash in Pennsylvania

    “Deputies discovered 70-year-old John Sikirica in the front seat of the plane with visible injuries,” the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office added. “86-year-old Allen Maxwell, who had been in the rear seat, managed to climb out of the plane, but he was also injured.”

    According to the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office, personnel with the North River Fire Rescue helped free the pilot from the airplane wreckage. The sheriff’s office explained that both of the elderly men received medical attention at the scene of the airplane crash and were later airlifted to local hospitals with “non-life-threatening” injuries.

    In Tuesday’s press release, the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office confirmed that no injuries were reported on the ground in connection with the airplane crash. The sheriff’s office also noted that Florida Power and Light, an electric service company, responded to the scene of the crash to “repair the damaged powerline.”

    According to Fox 13, Manatee County Public Information Officer Randy Warren confirmed that officials have not determined the cause of Tuesday’s crash.


    Source: American Military News

  • Broadway Nightclub fire was arson, Norfolk official confirms

    The fire that damaged a nightclub in early March has been confirmed arson, according to Battalion Chief Glen Williams.

    Around 2:40 a.m. March 5, Norfolk Fire-Rescue responded to a fire at Broadway Nightclub, which is located at 5671 E Virginia Beach Blvd. near the intersection with N Military Highway.

    The first crew arrived to find heavy fire coming from the back of the building, according to a release issued that morning.

    Williams said Monday morning the fire was exterior in nature.

    No one was inside the club at the time and no injuries were reported.

    The fire was called under control at 3:20 a.m.

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    © 2025 The Virginian-Pilot.

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Navy warship deployed to southern border

    The USS Gravely, a U.S. Navy destroyer that was recently deployed in the Middle East to intercept missiles fired by the Iran-backed Houthi terrorist organization, was deployed on Saturday to the southern border as part of President Donald Trump’s efforts to crack down on illegal immigration and illegal drug smuggling operations.

    In a Saturday press release, U.S. Northern Command confirmed that the USS Gravely, an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer, had left Naval Weapons Station Yorktown for a deployment in both U.S. and international waters under U.S. Northern Command.

    “USS Gravely’s deployment will contribute to the U.S. Northern Command southern border mission as part of the DOD’s coordinated effort in response to the Presidential Executive Order,” Gen. Gregory Guillot, commander of U.S. Northern Command, said. “Gravely’s sea-going capacity improves our ability to protect the United States’ territorial integrity, sovereignty, and security.”

    According to a Department of Defense press release, Air Force Lt. Gen. Alexus Grynkewich, joint staff director of operations, said the USS Gravely will be deployed to the Gulf of America and will help intercept drug smugglers by working “very closely with the U.S. Coast Guard’s drug interdiction mission.”

    READ MORE:Pics: Terrorists attack US warships: Report

    U.S. Northern Command explained that the deployment of the U.S. Navy destroyer “highlights the Department of Defense and Navy’s dedication to national security priorities, contributing to a coordinated and robust response to combating maritime related terrorism, weapons proliferation, transnational crime, piracy, environmental destruction, and illegal seaborne immigration.”

    In the Department of Defense press release, Guilliot said the deployment of the USS Gravely is an “important step in the whole-of-government efforts to seal the southern border and maintain U.S. sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

    A picture of the USS Gravely was shared Saturday on X, formerly Twitter, by U.S. Northern Command. “The USS Gravely is en route to support our #southernborder security mission,” U.S. Northern Command tweeted.

    Sean Parnell, the Pentagon’s chief spokesperson, told reporters on Monday that it was not only “vital” for the United States to exercise control of the southern border “via land,” but it is “equally important to control our territorial waters, and this deployment directly supports U.S. Northern Command’s mission to protect our sovereignty.” 

    A U.S. Coast Guard captain previously told Fox News that there had been roughly 200 encounters with migrant boats near the coast of San Diego, California, over a 90-day period.

    Addressing the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration, Coast Guard District 11 Capt. Jason Hagen said, “They’re locking down the land border pretty good… where they used to get thousands a day. Now, they’re now down in the hundreds a day. So, the migrants have to go somewhere. The smugglers have to move their operations somewhere. And we’re starting to see an uptick in the maritime environment.”


    Source: American Military News

  • New tactics, routes arm Haitian gangs. Florida a key to illicit flow of guns and ammo

    The Miami shipper’s list of 134 items headed for the Caribbean looked pretty tame: tires, bicycles, refrigerators and mattresses.

    But buried inside the container were a military-grade Barrett .50 caliber sniper rifle with silencer and an Uzi machine gun, along with dozens of other high-powered weapons and tens of thousands of bullets of different calibers.

    The shipment, which left the Miami River on Feb. 13 and was seized last week at the Haina Oriental Port just outside of Santo Domingo, wasn’t destined for the delivery in the Dominican Republic. It was “in transit to Haiti,” according to shipping documents obtained by the Miami Herald.

    As Haiti’s powerful criminal gangs expand their influence and carry out some of the worst massacres in recent memory, they are increasingly tapping into supply lines of military-grade and higher-caliber weapons provided by smugglers in Florida and other states who charge significant markups for their illicit overseas sales. The traffickers are purchasing thousands of illegal firearms in the United States, while employing alternative smuggling routes and export tactics, including hiding weapons and ammunition in fuel canisters and air compressors to sneak them out of U.S. ports in violation of both a U.S. and United Nations arms embargo on Haiti.

    The smugglers’ shipping destinations and firearms customers may ultimately be in Haiti, but they have shifted their focus from exporting to the embattled capital of Port-au-Prince to more remote locations in the country and to the neighboring Dominican Republic, which shares a porous 243-mile border on the island of Hispaniola.

    “As the gangs have gotten a lot of control over border areas, I am not surprised to see that weapons are coming through those places,” said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and security expert who follows Haiti. “All traffickers want to have as diverse routes as possible, and they are very adaptive in responding to particular routes or particular smuggling methods being suppressed.”

    William O’Neill, the United Nations independent human rights expert on Haiti, said that the fastest, quickest way to dismantle the gangs in Haiti would be to stop the flow of weapons, especially ammunition.

    “There’s not a gun or bullet manufactured in Haiti,” he said as he addressed the spiraling security crisis this week during a press conference. “Haitians obviously need to do more on their side. The Dominicans need to do more on their side.

    “And we in the United States need to do much more, because a lot of the guns that are coming via or through the Dominican Republic originate in Florida or elsewhere in the United States.”

    Statistics bear that out. According to the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security, which regulates weapons exports from the U.S. to foreign countries, about half of all firearms-export investigations have been concentrated in the Caribbean region since 2000. And, more than half of the weapons recovered from crimes in the Caribbean between 2017 and 2021 were originally purchased from federally licensed firearms dealers in Florida, according to a 2024 report by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

    Dominican seizures

    Twice in the last three months, authorities in the Dominican Republic have made seizures of illicit firearms at the Haina port, south of Santo Domingo and popular among freight consolidation companies that combine smaller shipments from multiple people in the diaspora sending goods to their families, and delivering them “door-to-door.”

    The seizures have come to underscore, not just how Dominicans are cracking down on illicit arms, but how the popular tourist destination is being used not only to dodge Haitian customs duties on the other side of the border but to traffic Haiti-bound weapons.

    In January, the Directorate General of Customs discovered a cache of 85 firearms including AK-47s and Glock pistols; 83 firearm parts and eight firearms accessories hidden in sealed compressor tanks that were shipped from Brooklyn, New York, a senior Dominican customs official confirmed to the Herald on Wednesday. All of them were imported via this “shipping’ method,” the official said.

    According to other sources, the weapons were headed to Belladère, a border town in Haiti’s Central Plateau that is quickly emerging as a hub for illegal weapons imports.

    Last week, another lethal arsenal supply was discovered when X-ray scanners revealed discrepancies in the images and a physical inspection was then conducted. Along with military-grade rifles capable of piercing through armored vehicles and airplanes, Dominican authorities found 22 other firearms, including Glock pistols, and 36,000 bullets of various calibers. There were also rifle magazines, 9 mm magazines and a .50 caliber rifle magazine.

    The discoveries were made as several court cases in Florida show that traffickers are using all kinds of methods to move guns through the Dominican Republic and seaports outside of Port-au-Prince, where gangs are now in control of up to 90% of the capital. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime acknowledges that despite the presence of an armed international force in Haiti and the global arms embargo that were extended last year, Haitian gangs are still being heavily armed.

    “Despite the reinforcement of the arms embargo, weapons and ammunition trafficking continue to flow into Haiti and into the hands of gangs,” Ghada Waly, the head of the U.N. drug office, told the Security Council in January, the same day that Dominican customs made the discovery of the Brooklyn shipment during a routine inspection.

    Waly said reports suggest that not only are Haitian gangs acquiring high-caliber firearms and ammunition, but they now possess multiple high-powered, long-range Barrett M82A1 .50 caliber sniper rifles, used in war. Weapons trafficking routes to Haiti have also been shifting at both the source and destination, she said.

    Between October and January, the U.N. drug office found that firearms seizures in the U.S. linked to Haiti were primarily reported in Port Everglades, and not Miami. And in Haiti, most seizures were reported in the northern city of Cap-Haïtien, and not Port-au-Prince.

    “This may suggest that successful interdiction efforts have caused traffickers to explore other routes,” Waly said.

    Dominican customs officials say since 2021 they’ve routinely been using high-tech, non-intrusive X-rays at the Haina port to crackdown on illicit goods. Haiti doesn’t have the technology, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which declined to comment on the ongoing investigation, only uses the scanner when they have suspicions or tips that shipments may have illicit items.

    Beefed up Dominican surveillance

    The recent seizures, the Dominican official said, “reflect an unprecedented strengthening of customs surveillance and controls in the Dominican Republic.”

    “Over the past four years, the Directorate General of Customs, DGA, has undergone a historic transformation, achieving record numbers in the fight against smuggling and organized crime,” he said. “Firearms and ammunition smuggling poses a serious national security threat. Therefore, Dominican customs have intensified their collaboration with national and international agencies, raising control and detection standards to combat this crime more effectively.

    “These constant and strategic efforts have positioned the Dominican Republic as a regional leader in the fight against illicit trade while ensuring legitimate commerce, making the country not only a logistics hub but also a secure hub.”

    Two days after the latest discovery at the port in Haina, Dominican authorities arrested Urbano Eugenio García and Máximo Pérez Berigüete, in connection with the seized arsenal that included 17 high-caliber guns. The men, owners of a transport company, have been automatically detained for one year in a lock-up while prosecutors continued to investigate the case.

    According to Diario Libre, the two defendants’ attorney, Luis Matos, questioned the court’s decision. His clients, he argued, were “useful fools” who operating a transport company. “It’s very unlikely that they knew what was inside the container,” Matos is quoted as saying.

    García’s Miami-based company, Eugenio Trading, is listed on documents as the shipper. Berigüete, according to Dominican media, is the one who received the containers in the Dominican Republic in order to send them to Haiti. Both men reportedly live in the south of the Dominican Republic near Belladère in Haiti, where last week’s shipment and the one from January were headed.

    Late Thursday, Belladère resident Guitho Senat, who is listed on the shipping documents as the receiver of the cargo in Haiti, was arrested in the nearby city of Hinche for arms trafficking, Lional Lazarre, said a spokesman for the Haiti National Police. A Haitian woman and business owner in her 50s, is also wanted in connection with the illicit shipment.

    “Our message is clear: the Dominican Republic is not and will not be a channel for arms trafficking,” the Dominican customs official said. “We will continue leading this fight with determination to ensure safe trade.”

    Emerging contraband route

    On the surface, the Haina port incidents appear to be a run of the mill arms-trafficking effort. But in Haiti, where some have been increasingly alarmed by an uptick in contraband flowing into the country across the land border with the Dominican Republic, it’s anything but usual.

    It is part of an emerging trend, Haitians say: merchandise is arriving in transit in the Dominican Republic and then transferred from shipping containers onto trucks that are then driven across the border to Haiti, where they are sometimes escorted by Haitian police. The practice not only allows importers to avoid paying customs duties on goods as they cross the poorly patrolled border, but it allows weapons smugglers to move firearms, several individuals aware of the practice say.

    A Haitian official, who asked for anonymity in order to speak freely about the practice, cited a flash point at Port-au-Prince’s government seaport in July of 2022 when Haitian customs officers seized a cache of weapons hidden in containers marked for the Episcopal Church of Haiti that had left from Port Everglades. Several Church officials were arrested and the incident led to more scrutiny at the Port-au-Prince port, which the official said pushed traffickers to use remote ports to smuggle weapons.

    “They realized that it was going to be difficult for them to enter with guns and ammunition,” said the official. ‘“When they realized they would get arrested, they then went to Cap-Haïtien.”

    But then Haitian authorities began making seizures at that port, and even arrested a customs supervisor after they found more than two dozen handguns and assault rifles and hundreds of rounds of ammunition hidden in boxes in a April 2024 shipment arriving from Port Everglades. Amid a crackdown by customs and anti-drug trafficking police at the Cap-Haïtien seaport, protests broke out and Haiti’s customs office temporarily halted operations there.

    “They finally relaxed,” the official said about traffickers who, after no longer being able to hold on, “then started to use the ‘in transit’ option through the frontier.”

    The increased use of that option, the official noted, coincided with last year’s kidnapping of two Filipino crew members off a cargo ship and string of brazen gangs attacks targeting ships calling on the government port in Port-au-Prince. In response, several maritime lines canceled or paused shipments into Haiti while others rerouted cargo to the Dominican Republic where the goods were later transported by road into Haiti.

    “You will see that it’s a very well organized network,” the official said. “For me, they planned that well so they could force open the route.”

    Haiti’s porous border lacks scanners, drones

    Haitian officials say they do not have an accounting of how much the government is being defrauded by goods moving through the frontier, much less how much of it may also include stashes of illegal weapons. But they estimate “it’s a lot” of contraband, at the very least, after stopping several vehicles with cargo, including a recent seizure of a 40-foot container with contraband that crossed the Haiti-Dominican land border and was being escorted by Haitian police officers into Port-au-Prince.

    Last year, Haiti’s customs office asked the then-Finance Minister Ketleen Florestal to shut down the “transit route” by issuing an interdiction against products disembarking in the Dominican Republic. But the measure wasn’t taken. Florestal, who was moved to the planning ministry in the cabinet shakeup last fall, acknowledged in an interview Thursday on Port-au-Prince’s Magik9 radio station that illicit trafficking is a huge problem and said she had taken steps to mount a task force to address the contraband crossing the border before leaving the ministry.

    O’Neill, the U.N. independent human rights expert on Haiti, said Haiti’s unguarded borders are a huge problem. There are only 300 Haitian police officers, for example, assigned to frontier and they lack everything from bodies to equipment.

    “They’re begging for scanners. They need more drones so they could at least do surveillance,” said O’Neill, who raised concerns about the border during his visit to Haiti last week. “The Haitian state is losing billions of dollars in revenue, because there’s a lot of contraband coming into the country that’s never paying any duties or taxes, and because they often use the unofficial crossings.

    “How can you have a safe country if you’re not sure what’s coming in or out? Same thing by sea, a lot of little boats are coming in and out of Haiti, and also little airplanes that land, and that’s been for years,” he said.

    Florida connections in weapons flow

    In the past year, the United States has poured more than $600 million into an international armed force in Haiti to help the fight against surging gangs. The money has gone into the deployment of about 1,000 foreign police and some military personnel, armored vehicles and night goggles.

    But despite the heightened crackdown, gangs continue to sow chaos as they tightened their grip on the capital and parts of the neighboring Artibonite region, also located next door to the Central Plateau.

    Their access to powerful weapons and ammunition plays a major part in their dominant status. Recent online postings by gang leaders show them brandishing the Barrett .50 caliber sniper rifle and bragging about arming members with recently acquired weapons.

    Also striking: several court cases in Florida highlight the extent to which criminal networks operate to funnel weapons to Haiti and its menacing gangs.

    On Tuesday, a Guatemalan who had been illegally living in the U.S. under a fake identity was sentenced to 14 years in prison in Tampa federal court after pleading guilty to international firearms trafficking charges. Over the past two years, Ricardo Fermin Sune-Giron, 34, and his co-conspirators smuggled “thousands” of firearms to the Dominican Republic and Haiti, according to prosecutors.

    Sune-Giron obtained the weapons by recruiting straw purchasers to illegally buy firearms — including Glocks, rifles and AK-47s — from federally licensed firearms stores across Central Florida and from private dealers, according to the facts spelled out in his plea agreement. He then sold the weapons to others on the black market.

    “Those individuals were the persons who would primarily package the firearms and have them sent abroad,” Sune-Giron’s lawyer admitted in court papers, while seeking a lower sentence for his client. “He was aware the destination of these firearms was primarily to be the Dominican Republic and Haiti.

    Eight of the firearms trafficked by his network were later recovered at crime scenes in the Dominican Republic, prosecutors said.

    Another case shows the ability of firearms traffickers to infiltrate law enforcement: St. Cloud police officer Michael Adrian Nieto, 31, is facing a maximum of five years in federal prison after pleading guilty to dealing in firearms without a license.

    According to a plea agreement, Nieto repeatedly purchased and resold firearms to traffickers. Among others, Nieto supplied an Orlando group that smuggled hundreds of weapons and Chinese-made machine gun-conversion devices to the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and Haiti, according to prosecutors in Tampa.

    The group’s leader, Ernesto Vazquez, 23, also purchased weapons from an unlicensed supplier, Derick Yamir Perez Diaz, 22, and a federally licensed dealer, Matthew Easton, 35. All three have pleaded guilty. Perez Diaz was sentenced last month to 11 years in prison; the others await sentencing.

    Guns hidden in air compressors

    In South Florida, a former Haitian national police officer was recently accused of playing a leading role in a Florida-Haiti weapons trafficking operation. Jean Robert Casimir, 52, who once served on the security team of a former Haiti National Police chief, was arrested in December after U.S. investigators traced two semi-automatic AR-15 assault weapons back to him.

    Casimir, who is being held in a federal lock-up, pleaded not guilty to a conspiracy defrauding the United States, export violations and weapons smuggling in February and awaits trial.

    In the same case, it was also disclosed by prosecutors in a court filing that they were probing allegations that Casimir schemed to make money for himself and the People’s Republic of China “through the unlawful taking of information from the Federal Reserve Board in the United States.”

    His defense attorney, Alfred Guillaume, declined to comment on Thursday.

    The investigation into Casimir took off after he was detained last August at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International upon a return trip from Haiti, court records show.

    Customs and Border Protection agents questioned Casimir about his weapons exports, and he admitted to smuggling firearms to Haiti by packing them in boxes and delivering them to the crew of a boat that disembarked in a port in Miragoâne, south of Port-au-Prince, according to a criminal complaint and affidavit by Homeland Security Investigations.

    But he lied about the frequency of his trafficking activities, low balling the number of firearms that he smuggled, the affidavit says.

    Agents seized both his Apple iPhones and “uncovered significant numbers of photos, videos, audio recordings, and text messages relating to the purchase of firearms in the U.S. and the sale of firearms in Haiti,“ the affidavit says.

    “The records show the purchase of at least 87 firearms over the course of at least 30 separate transactions, of the type that generally match the firearms in the photographs law enforcement has viewed of the weapons in Haiti.”

    Casimir denied selling firearms to gang members but provided an explanation about how some of his firearms ended up with Haiti street gangs. He claimed that “an employee of his was attacked by a gang while transporting firearms and several firearms were stolen by the gang during this robbery.”

    The affidavit not only shows Casimir evading scrutiny of his weapons shipments into Haiti by sending them to a port outside of the capital, but in order to conceal the guns he hid them in air tanks of two large air compressors, according to iPhone videos he sent showing crews cutting them open.

    “The series of videos appears to show that an angle grinder was used to cut the tanks in half,” the affidavit says. “Inside the tanks were duct tape-wrapped packages in the shape of firearms and firearm magazines. The tanks also contained boxes that could contain firearms, ammunition, magazines, or firearms parts.”

    In fact, Casimir shipped multiple weapons to Haiti this way, agents said. In one instance, a shipper sent him a voice message in English and Creole complaining that he shipped compressors all the time and his tanks were unusually “heavy.”

    “Let me know what else is in the boxes … how I have to deal with this shit?” the shipper said, asking if he needed to “use discretion and hide things.”

    Minutes later, Casimir responded with a voice message in Haitian Creole: “the air compressors have custom motor conversions and are destined for a ‘project’ in Haiti for a group who repairs tires.”

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    © 2025 Miami Herald.

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Trump sees ‘very good chance’ of peace after ‘productive’ talks with Putin

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.

    US President Donald Trump said he sees a “very good chance” for peace between Ukraine and Russia after “very good and productive discussions” between US officials and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    In a March 14 post on his Truth Social site, Trump also said the United States had urged Russia to spare the lives of “thousands” of Ukrainian soldiers that Putin has said have been isolated by Russian troops in Russia’s Kursk region. Ukraine disputes that claim.

    The post came just hours after the Kremlin said it was “cautiously optimistic” following a meeting late on March 13 between Putin and US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff.

    “We had very good and productive discussions with President Vladimir Putin of Russia yesterday, and there is a very good chance that this horrible, bloody war can finally come to an end,” Trump wrote.

    Trump added that “thousands of Ukrainian troops are completely surrounded by the Russian military, and in a very bad and vulnerable position.”

    “I have strongly requested to President Putin that their lives be spared,” he wrote. “This would be a horrible massacre, one not seen since World War II.”

    Putin said a day earlier that a group of Ukrainian troops were “isolated” in the Kursk region, the site of a surprise incursion by Ukrainian forces last August. Responding to Trump’s plea on March 14, he said the soldiers’ lives would be spared if they surrendered and urged Kyiv to order them to do so.

    Officials in Kyiv have said that while Ukrainian forces have been slowly withdrawing in the Kursk region under heavy pressure from Russian troops, but the armed forces general staff said on March 14 that “[r]eports of the alleged ‘encirclement’ of Ukrainian units…in the Kursk region are false and fabricated.”

    “There is no threat of encirclement of our units,” it said in a statement on social media.

    Zelenskyy Challenges Putin’s Motives

    Earlier on March 14, Putin’s spokesman said there were grounds for “cautious optimism” over Trump’s 30-day cease-fire proposal, which Ukraine accepted earlier this week at talks with US officials in Saudi Arabia.

    Ukraine, meanwhile, questioned Moscow’s sincerity in ending the war, which is now in its fourth year since Russia’s full-scale invasion on February 2022.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow that Putin sent Trump a message about his cease-fire proposal after his talks with Witkoff in the Russian capital.

    “When Mr Witkoff brings all the information to President Trump, we will determine the timing of a conversation (between Trump and Putin). There are reasons to be cautiously optimistic,” Peskov said.

    Putin said a day earlier that he agrees in principle with the US proposal for a temporary cease-fire with Ukraine, but added that “there are nuances,” such as Western weapons deliveries to Kyiv, that he wants addressed first.

    The Russian leader also said any agreement should lead to long-term peace that addresses the “root” reasons for the war, an apparent reference to NATO expansion and other developments Putin claims have put Russia’s security in jeopardy.

    In a video posted late on March 13, Zelenskyy questioned Putin’s motives, saying the Russian leader was preparing to reject the proposal but was afraid to tell Trump.

    “That’s why in Moscow they are imposing upon the idea of a cease-fire these conditions — so that nothing happens at all, or so that it cannot happen for as long as possible,” Zelenskyy said.

    He followed up on March 14 with a post on social media accusing the Kremlin of trying to “complicate and drag out the process.”

    “Russia is the only party that wants the war to continue and diplomacy to break down,” he said on X after a call with the Secretary of State of the Holy See, cardinal Pietro Parolin.

    Putin’s Response To Trump’s Pressure

    Kyiv agreed to Trump’s 30-day cease-fire proposal at a meeting in Jeddah on March 11, putting the onus for peace in Moscow’s lap. Putin’s response threw the ball back into US hands, at least to some degree.

    Trump called Putin’s initial reaction to peace talk developments “promising” but incomplete, though he added he hoped Russia would “do the right thing” and agree to the deal.

    “I think the Russians are keen not to be seen as the intransigent party as that could lead to consequences from Trump, such as sanctions. So that informed Putin’s comments today,” John Hardie, deputy director of the Russia Program at Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington-based think tank, told RFE/RL.

    Trump has made ending the war in Ukraine a top priority since taking office for a second term less than two months ago, and is wielding US leverage to get both Kyiv and Moscow to the table.

    On March 13, the US administration heightened pressure on Russia by increasing restrictions on the country’s oil, gas, and banking sectors.

    Among the measures, the Treasury Department was allowing the expiration of a 60-day exemption put in place in January by the Biden administration that let some energy transactions involving sanctioned Russian banks continue. The move would make it more difficult for other nations, especially in Europe, to buy Russian oil.

    Meanwhile, the foreign ministers from the Group of Seven (G7) — which includes the United States, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan — said they discussed imposing more sanctions on Russia and boosting support for Ukraine if the Kremlin does not agree to the cease-fire.

    Among the measures discussed during the March 13-14 meeting were caps on the price for Russian oil exports, they said in a joint statement. Western nations in late 2022 imposed a $60-a-barrel price cap on the export of Russian oil using Western ships or insurance. It is unclear if the G7 discussions touched on lowering the price cap. Russia’s economy is heavily dependent on oil exports, which account for a third of federal budget revenues.

    In a joint statement following the meeting, the G7 said that “we reaffirmed our unwavering support for Ukraine in defending its territorial integrity and right to exist, and its freedom, sovereignty, and independence.”

    “We welcomed ongoing efforts to achieve a ceasefire, and in particular the meeting on March 11 between the US and Ukraine in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” it added.

    Putin also said there were several unanswered questions in the proposal, such as what to do about Ukraine’s incursion into Russia’s Kursk region.

    “If we have a cease-fire, does that mean that everyone there would leave?” Putin said. “Should we release them [Ukrainian troops] after they committed crimes against the population? Or would they surrender?”

    Ukraine denies committing such crimes, saying it abides by humanitarian law and does not target civilians.

    Why Should Russia Agree To A Cease-Fire?

    Kyiv seized a swath of the Kursk region in a stealth incursion in August, a move seen as an effort to divert Russian forces from eastern Ukraine and use the territory as a bargaining chip in any peace talks.

    That strategy is now failing as Russian forces supported by North Korean troops push the Ukrainians out of Kursk. Russia has regained more than half the territory in Kursk initially captured by Ukraine.

    Zelenskyy told reporters on March 14 that the situation in Kursk was “obviously very difficult.”

    Among the other concerns Putin voiced about the cease-fire proposal is whether Ukraine would use the 30-day period to mobilize and train forces or rearm with the help of the West.

    He also raised the question of how the nearly 2,000-kilometer front would be monitored. Zelenskyy told reporters that the front could be monitored by US satellites.

    Experts had warned that Putin would likely seek to drag out cease-fire talks because his forces have the upper hand on the battlefield.

    Aside from the advances in Kursk, Russia is gaining territory in eastern Ukraine — albeit at high human and material costs — due to its significant manpower advantage.

    However, Zelenskyy said Ukraine has stopped Russian forces at the gates of Pokrovsk, a key logistical hub in Donetsk region, after months of fighting on the outskirts of the city. Zelenskyy asserted that the incursion into Kursk forced Russia to pull forces from eastern Ukraine, giving his troops time to defend the city.

    Russia is seeking to capture at a minimum the entirety of the four regions of Ukraine it claims to have annexed in September 2022: Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhya, and Kherson. A cease-fire freezing the current front lines would leave them short of that goal.

    “One way the Russians could slow down this process without coming out directly and saying ‘no’, is by dragging out those technical discussions on monitoring” the cease-fire, Hardie said.

    “That could also give them ways to try to pin the blame back on Ukraine, by insisting on certain technical matters that Ukraine might find objectionable,” he said.


    Source: American Military News

  • Trump revokes Hunter, Ashley Biden’s Secret Service protection

    President Donald Trump announced on Monday that his administration would be “immediately” revoking Secret Service protection for former President Joe Biden’s adult children, Hunter and Ashley Biden.

    In a Monday post on Truth Social, Trump wrote, “Hunter Biden has had Secret Service protection for an extended period of time, all paid for by the United States Taxpayer. There are as many as 18 people on this Detail, which is ridiculous!”

    Trump explained that Hunter Biden is currently vacationing in South Africa, “where the Human Rights of people has been strenuously questioned,” resulting in the United States removing South Africa from the list of countries receiving economic and financial assistance from the U.S.

    “Please be advised that, effective immediately, Hunter Biden will no longer receive Secret Service protection,” the 47th president added. “Likewise, Ashley Biden who has 13 agents will be taken off the list.”

    According to U.S. law, while former presidents receive Secret Service protection for their entire lives, the children of former presidents are only guaranteed Secret Service protection until they are 16. The Associated Press reported that Trump and Biden both extended Secret Service protections for their children for six months after the end of their terms in office.

    READ MORE: Video: Biden being kicked off Dem’s 2024 ticket compared to ‘firing squad’

    Asked earlier on Monday if he would revoke the Secret Service protection for Hunter Biden after reports surfaced that the former president’s son was vacationing in South Africa, Trump said, “Well, we have done that with many. I would say if there are 18 with Hunter Biden, that will be something I’ll look at this afternoon.”

    After explaining why his administration has stopped providing financial assistance to South Africa, Trump added, “So he’s in South Africa? That’s very interesting. Alright, I’m going to take a look at that.”

    Trump’s comments came after Laura Loomer, an independent reporter, shared pictures of Hunter Biden in South Africa on social media.

    Loomer reported, “I can also exclusively confirm the US @SecretService is being forced to protect Hunter Biden, his second wife Melissa Cohen, and their child Beau as they shop at high end stores and live in an oceanside villa in Capetown for the next 6 weeks to 3 months.”

    The independent reporter added, “4 agents work to protect Hunter and his wife every 8 hours in 3 shifts, for a total of 12 Secret Service agents every day, ON US TAXPAYER DIME!”


    Source: American Military News

  • Trump appoints conservative to Air Force Academy Visitors Board

    President Donald Trump appointed Charlie Kirk, a conservative commentator and the founder of Turning Point USA, as a member of the U.S. Air Force Academy’s Board of Visitors on Monday.

    In a Monday post on Truth Social, Trump announced his new appointments to the U.S. Air Force Academy’s Board of Visitors, writing, “Our Great United States Air Force Academy will soon have an incredible Board of Visitors, composed of Doug Nikolai, Dan Clark, Senator Tommy Tuberville, Charlie Kirk, and Dina Powell. Congratulations to all.”

    Sharing a screenshot of the 47th president’s Truth Social post on X, formerly Twitter, Kirk wrote, “Thank you, Mr. President. The American people deserve service academies with exactly one focus: Recruiting and developing the best cadets possible to protect this country and her liberties. I am honored to have the chance to assist President Trump in executing this mission.”

    According to the U.S. Air Force Academy’s website, the U.S. Air Force Academy Board of Visitors falls under Title 10 U.S. Code 9455, which outlines the various appointments for the Board of Visitors.

    READ MORE: Pics: Trump appoints huge Hollywood stars to new position

    Six members of the U.S. Air Force Academy Board of Visitors are appointed by the president, two are appointed by the speaker of the House of Representatives, one is appointed by the House Minority Leader, one is appointed by both the chair and the ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, two are appointed by the Senate majority leader, two are appointed by the Senate minority leader, and one is appointed by both the chair and the ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

    The U.S. Air Force Academy’s website notes that the Board of Visitors “inquires into the morale, discipline, curriculum, instruction, physical equipment, fiscal affairs, academic methods and other matters relating to the Academy which the Board decides to consider.”

    Following Trump’s announcement on Monday, Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) also shared a screenshot of the president’s Truth Social post. The Republican senator tweeted, “Our Military Service Academies should be building LEADERS for the greatest fighting force on earth…not ‘social justice warriors’. I’m honored to be part of helping to restore that mission. Thank you, Mr. President!”


    Source: American Military News

  • Chinese warplanes fly near Taiwan as punishment for ‘separatism’

    The Chinese military sent 59 warplanes and conducted military exercises near Taiwan on Monday. Chinese officials claimed that the military exercises were executed as a punishment for the “separatism” promoted by Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te.

    In a Monday statement on X, formerly Twitter, the Ministry of National Defense of Taiwan said, “59 PLA aircraft and 9 PLAN vessels operating around Taiwan were detected up until 6 a.m. (UTC+8) today. 43 out of 59 sorties crossed the median line and entered Taiwan’s northern, central, southwestern and eastern ADIZ. 2 PRC balloons was detected during this timeframe.”

    According to Reuters, the Ministry of National Defense of Taiwan confirmed that China’s People’s Liberation Army and People’s Liberation Army Navy’s operations on Monday were part of “joint combat readiness patrols” near Taiwan. The outlet noted that the Chinese warplanes included J-10 jets and drones and that Taiwan dispatched naval and air forces to monitor China’s patrols.

    READ MORE: US soldiers charged for selling military secrets to China

    In a statement obtained by Reuters, a spokesperson for China’s Taiwan Affairs Office claimed that if Lai’s administration “dares to provoke and play with fire, it will only bring about its own destruction.”

    According to Reuters, while Taiwan often reports Chinese military activity similar to the exercises conducted on Monday, the Chinese government does not typically comment on the military activity like it did on Monday.

    Reuters reported that Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council noted that the Chinese government has continued to threaten Taiwan with its military, leading to increased tension in the Taiwan Strait. Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council described the Chinese Communist Party as a “troublemaker” and urged Taiwan’s allies to prevent the expansion of China’s military.

    According to Reuters, security officials in Taiwan have previously claimed that China is attempting to normalize military exercises near Taiwan by executing patrols every 7-10 days similar to the ones carried out on Monday.


    Source: American Military News