Category: Security

  • Jan. 6 Capitol storming tapes released to public; 40,000+ hours of footage

    On Friday, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) released to the public more than 40,000 hours of footage from the January 6, 2021, Capitol storming.

    “Follow the link below to view the January 6th tapes for yourself,” Johnson posted on X, formerly Twitter. “To restore America’s trust and faith in their Government we must have transparency. This is another step towards keeping the promises I made when I was elected to be your Speaker.”

    In a statement obtained by journalist Jake Sherman, Johnson reiterated his promise to make the footage accessible to the American people.

    “Today, we will begin immediately posting video on a public website and move as quickly as possible to add to the website nearly all of the footage, more than 40,000 hours. In the meantime, a public viewing room will ensure that every citizen can view every minute of the videos uncensored,” Johnson said. “This decision will provide millions of Americans, criminal defendants, public interest organizations, and the media an ability to see for themselves what happened that day, rather than having to rely upon the interpretation of a small group of government officials.”

    “I commend Chairman Loudermilk and his team for their diligent work to ensure the thousands of hours of videos are promptly processed to be uploaded to the committee’s public website,” he added. “Processing will involve blurring the faces of private citizens on the yet unreleased tapes to avoid any persons from being targeted for retaliation of any kind and segregating an estimated 5% of the videos that may involve sensitive security information related to the building architecture.”

    Johnson made the footage publicly available after less than one month as speaker. His predecessor, former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), previously made a small fraction of the footage available to media outlets.

    This was a breaking news story. The details were periodically updated as more information became available. 



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  • Rogan calls Trump, Carlson, Kid Rock ‘Right Wing Avengers’

    During a recent episode of the “Joe Rogan Experience” podcast, Rogan called former President Donald Trump, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, and American singer Kid Rock the “Right Wing Avengers.”

    As part of his popular podcast program, Rogan described the thunderous ovation the former president received as he entered Madison Square Garden in New York City Saturday night with Carlson, Rock, Dana White, and Donald Trump Jr.

    “When he walked out of Madison Square Garden, it was f-cking bananas. The whole place was cheering. He walks out to Kid Rock’s American Badass’ with Kid Rock and Tucker Carlson walking in like the ‘Right Wing Avengers,’” Rogan said. “And the place went nuts. I’m telling you, the f-cking cheers of the crowd were nuts.”

    Sharing the video clip of Rogan’s comments on X, formerly Twitter, Collin Rugg, co-owner of Trending Politics, highlighted Rogan’s description of how the crowd appeared to be “overwhelmingly in support” of the former president. Rugg said the crowd’s reaction Saturday was “different” than previous crowd reactions that Trump has been greeted with when he has attended other events at the arena.

    READ MORE: Video: Trump, Tucker Carlson, Kid Rock attend UFC match; ‘USA’ chants erupt

    “It was overwhelming in support of him, and it lasted a long time,” Rogan said. “I mean, you had to hear what the crowd sounded like before he walked in and then when he did. I mean it was just overwhelming cheers for like over a minute. I mean, just imagine a minute of people screaming at the top of their lungs.”

    The former president’s attendance at the Ultimate Fighting Championship match last Saturday night generated a significant amount of media attention as the crowd erupted into chants of “USA.”

    Trump, who arrived at the boxing match just prior to the start of the event, was recorded pumping his fist and waving to the crowd as he walked into the arena alongside Carlson, Rock, White, and Trump Jr.



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  • Navy SEAL who killed Bin Laden reacts to viral Bin Laden trend

    A new trend on TikTok, the popular Chinese-owned social media platform, features young people praising Osama bin Laden, the former al-Qaeda leader, for his “Letter to America,” claiming that reading the letter has forever changed their perspective of the United States and terrorism. The TikTok trend has led the former Navy SEAL who killed bin Laden to issue a scathing rebuke of those using the terrorist leader’s letter to justify terrorism.

    According to The Daily Wire, bin Laden’s “Letter to America” contains a significant amount of antisemitic and anti-Western language. The al-Qaeda terrorist leader wrote the letter as a justification for the devastating 9/11 terrorist attacks that caused the death of roughly 3,000 Americans in New York City, Pennsylvania, and Washington, D.C.

    In a post on X, formerly Twitter, journalist Yashar Ali shared a compilation of TikTok videos featuring young people praising bin Laden’s “Letter to America.”

    “Over the past 24 hours, thousands of TikToks (at least) have been posted where people share how they just read Bin Laden’s infamous ‘Letter to America,’ in which he explained why he attacked the United States,” Ali wrote. “Many of them say that reading the letter has opened their eyes, and they’ll never see geopolitical matters the same way again.”

    Ali added that many TikTok users claimed that reading bin Laden’s “Letter to America” caused them to “reevaluate their perspective” regarding the definition of terrorism, with some users even suggesting that terrorism is a “legitimate form of resistance to a hostile power.”

    In the video, one young woman claimed the letter was “wild” and urged everyone to read it. She added that the letter “left her disillusioned.” Another woman in the video said the letter caused her to have an “existential crisis. “In the last 20 minutes, my entire viewpoint on the entire life I have believed and I have lived has changed,” she said. “Please read that entire letter.”

    A young man featured in the video described “Letter to America” as the “craziest thing” he had read “in a while.” He urged other social media users to stop whatever they were doing and read the letter for themselves.

    READ MORE: Video: Terrorist threat in US at new alarming level, FBI warns

    Finally, the man shared an X post that he said reminded him of what bin Laden said in his letter, stating, “Under settler colonialism, any kind of resistance is branded as [terrorism] because the only acceptable violence is violence by the occupier.”

    In response to the new TikTok trend, Robert O’Neill, the Navy SEAL who killed Osama bin Laden during a U.S. military operation in 2011, described the trend as “the positive reaction from Gen Z” toward the former terrorist leader that many young people claimed to have after reading bin Laden’s “Letter to America.”

    Bluntly responding to the social media trend with a post on X, O’Neill stated, “Deceit is a mask the Devil puts over the eyes of useful idiots.”

    In 2014, the former Navy SEAL first claimed to have killed bin Laden during a U.S. military operation. The U.S. government has never officially confirmed or denied O’Neil O’Neill’s claims.

    After the TikTok trend quickly received widespread backlash and criticism, TikTok explained that the company was taking steps to remove the videos that praised terrorism. In a statement obtained by NBC News, TikTok spokesperson Ben Rathe said the videos praising bin Laden for his “Letter to America” and attempting to justify terrorists represent a violation of the social media platform’s community guidelines.

    “Content promoting this letter clearly violates our rules on supporting any form of terrorism,” he said. “We are proactively and aggressively removing this content and investigating how it got onto our platform. The number of videos on TikTok is small and reports of it trending on our platform are inaccurate. This is not unique to TikTok and has appeared across multiple platforms and the media.”



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  • Pakistan extends deadline for Uyghurs refugees facing deportation

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    Pakistani authorities have temporarily extended the period of stay for Uyghurs living in the city of Rawalpindi who were at risk for deportation under a government order to expel all illegal migrants by the start of November, a Uyghur involved in the situation said.

    Nearly 20 Uyghur families — or about 100 individuals — who live in Pakistan’s fourth-biggest city but do not possess Afghan, Chinese passports or Pakistani residence permits have feared deportation to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan or China. 

    Most of the affected Uyghurs are descendants of individuals who migrated decades ago from Xinjiang to Afghanistan and later to Pakistan. 

    Pakistani authorities have not specified the duration of the extension, though they said the matter would be discussed in Pakistan’s parliament, and a decision would soon be made, according to Omer Khan, founder of the Pakistan-based Omer Uyghur Trust, who has been assisting the families.

    “The Pakistani government has temporarily extended our stay, but we don’t know if it’s for three months or six months,” he told Radio Free Asia.

    In early October, Pakistan declared that all foreigners without legal documents had to leave by Nov. 1 or face arrest and deportation. The decision was made in response to the killing of dozens of people in two suicide bombings at mosques in late September.  

    Since most of the attacks had been carried out by Afghan nationals, officials decided to expel foreigners without a valid residence permit – including 1.73 million Afghan refugees – if they didn’t leave on their own.

    But on Nov. 10, authorities announced that they had extended the legal residence status of over 1 million Afghan refugees until the end of the year, though Islamabad again rejected calls to stop deporting undocumented Afghans and other foreign nationals, Voice of America reported.

    The Uyghurs have been living in a state of uncertainty for the past month and have been subjected to sudden house raids, searches and questioning by police, and threats of eviction by landlords.

    The U.N. refugee agency’s office in Pakistan has given the Uyghurs a 24-hour emergency response phone number to call if they continued to face police harassment, Khan said, adding that the office told them that Pakistan could not deport them because they are Uyghurs, not Afghans.

    “They conveyed to us that they have informed the Geneva [headquarters] about our situation,” Khan said. “Because we are Uyghurs, not Afghans, they will engage with the Pakistani government and have advised us to await positive news.”

    Khan also said he spoke with the Pakistani landlords who rent homes to the Uyghurs, and they agreed not to evict them. 



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  • Jennifer Aniston: Matthew Perry’s death ‘cut deep,’ released ‘insane wave of emotions’

    The death of “Friends” star Matthew Perry “has cut deep” for co-star Jennifer Aniston, who paid tribute to the comedian on Instagram.

    “Having to say goodbye to our Matty has been an insane wave of emotions that I’ve never experienced before,” the “Morning Show” star said in her tribute shared Wednesday morning. “Being able to really SIT in this grief allows you to feel the moments of joy and gratitude for having loved someone that deep. And we loved him deeply.”

    Aniston and David Schwimmer became the latest “Friends” actors to share their personal goodbyes to Perry, who died in late October. They each paid tribute to Perry, best known for his portrayal of Chandler Bing, on social media.

    Perry was “such a part of our DNA,” Aniston reflected in her post. For years Aniston’s Rachel Green traded snark with Perry’s Chandler. She shared a behind-the-scenes photo of herself and Perry sharing a laugh during their “Friends” days, a screenshot from their text messages and an emotional clip from the episode titled “The One With Rachel’s Going Away Party.”

    Aniston praised Perry for his commitment to making audiences, his friends and co-stars laugh. She also told her Instagram followers about her grieving process, which has included revisiting her text messages with Perry and talking to him “every day” despite his death.

    “I can almost hear you saying ‘could you BE any crazier?,” she wrote. “Rest little brother. You always made my day…”

    Schwimmer thanked Perry for “ten incredible years of laughter and creativity” in an Instagram tribute also posted Wednesday morning. The “American Crime Story” actor, who played Ross Geller on the classic sitcom, shared a photo of himself and Perry dressed in bright “Miami Vice”-like outfits from their “The One With Thanksgiving Flashbacks.” episode.

    Perry “could take a straight line of dialogue and bend it to your will, resulting in something so entirely original and unexpectedly funny it still astonishes,” Schwimmer wrote. He also praised Perry for his heart and how he helped make the “Friends” cast feel like a family.

    Schwimmer wrote that even 25 years after it first aired, the 1998 Thanksgiving special remains “one of my favorite moments” with Perry.

    “I imagine you up there, somewhere, in the same white suit, hands in your pockets, looking around,” he continued. “‘Could there BE any more clouds?’”

    Aniston and Schwimmer shared their tributes just a day after fellow “Friends” Matt LeBlanc and Courteney Cox paid their respects. LeBlanc wrote he “will always smile when I think of [Perry],” while Cox revisited a special scene she had done with her on-screen husband.

    Perry, who was open about his struggles with addiction for years, was found unresponsive in a hot tub on Oct. 28 and declared dead at the scene. He was 54.

    On Oct. 30, Aniston, Cox, LeBlanc, Schwimmer and Lisa Kudrow mourned their co-star in a joint statement.

    “We are all so utterly devastated by the loss of Matthew. We were more than just cast mates. We are a family,” the statement to the L.A. Times said. “There is so much to say, but right now we’re going to take a moment to grieve and process this unfathomable loss.”

    From 1994 to 2004, Perry and his five co-stars shared the screen and entertained thousands of live-audience members in the hit NBC sitcom “Friends.” As Chandler, Perry brought his signature sarcasm to a playful group that quickly became one of TV’s most iconic ensemble casts.

    Officials say they are working to determine Perry’s cause of death, but that investigation could take three to six months to complete, the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner said earlier this month. Foul play has been ruled out.

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    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Senators embrace AI on the farm, eye provisions in farm bill

    Artificial intelligence is already a workhorse in the technology that allows tractors to identify weeds and tailor herbicide spraying, determine when a crop is ready to harvest and weave together satellite and soil data to make efficient use of fertilizer.

    But Senate Agriculture Committee members said Tuesday that AI’s potential to bring more advances in agriculture comes with risks about farm data protection; the affordability of technology, particularly for small farms; consolidation in the sector; and other, unforeseen consequences.

    Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., said the committee and Congress will have to balance policies that encourage innovation but protect against excesses. He told witnesses that he is working on legislation to put up guardrails while maintaining “a light touch” on regulations.

    One witness at the panel’s hearing urged senators to include provisions in the farm bill that would allow farmers to get loans from the Agriculture Department that would encourage adoption of AI and precision technology. Agriculture Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., suggested such provisions look likely.

    Lawmakers are working on a continuing resolution that would extend the 2018 farm bill to Sept. 30, 2024. The bill expired on Sept. 30 and an extension would give Congress time to write a new farm bill. The House passed the CR on Tuesday and the Senate may take it up as early as Wednesday.

    José-Marie Griffiths, president of Dakota State University in South Dakota, which has a focus on AI, cyber and quantum computing, called for a measured approach on regulation.

    “I do believe strongly in a lighter touch than heavy-duty regulation because the moment regulation gets to be too much, innovation shrinks naturally,” Griffiths said. “I think it is important that we ensure that innovation can occur but at the same time have these guardrails to mitigate risks.”

    Stabenow and ranking member John Boozman, R-Ark., convened the hearing to delve into the potential promise and peril of AI in food production, processing and related areas. The hearing follows several special briefings open to all senators on the broad use of artificial intelligence and an Oct. 30 presidential executive order directing federal departments and agencies to promote AI use while also ensuring the technology is safe and free of bias.

    Stabenow, who used AI to write part of her opening statement, said the technology opens “new pathways to address the climate crisis, increase production, lower input costs and automate planting and harvesting.”

    But she also cautioned that “placing vast amounts of data in the hands of a few private companies could accelerate the trend of consolidation in the agricultural industry or perpetuate bias that has harmed small farmers and farmers of color for decades.”

    Boozman also had words of caution.

    “While AI holds great potential, we should ask tough questions about the potential risks,” he said.

    Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., said lack of access to reliable high-speed internet services is a major hurdle for farmers and ranchers who might be willing to shoulder technology costs. Fischer and Sen. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M., have legislation that would establish a USDA program with a mission to make broadband available to farmers and ranchers so they can use precision agriculture as they work in remote fields. Fischer said other USDA broadband efforts focus on reaching households or businesses.

    Jahmy Hindman, senior vice president and chief technology officer for Deere & Co., said the next farm bill should include provisions from that legislation as well as from another bill from Fischer and Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., that would set up a USDA loan program to cover the cost of precision technology.

    Hindman said the provisions were “essential for farmers to fully leverage the benefits of AI and precision technologies.”

    Stabenow agreed, telling Fischer that she and Boozman had discussed her legislation and “having your work become part of what we’re doing in the farm bill.”

    Sens. Peter Welch, D-Vt., and Luján raised questions about access to AI products for small or non-English-speaking producers.

    “It’s an opportunity for bigger ag where you can spread the costs over time, but for a lot of smaller producers there’s a lot of skepticism about whether they can get a return on investment,” Welch said. “With the entry cost, how can we do things that will help the smaller farmers when they are not going to be able to take that risk with the higher front costs?”

    Mason Earles, an assistant professor at University of California, Davis who is part of the AI Institute for Next Generation Food Systems, said small farmers could use AI as a tool for helping them make decisions about their operations, much in the way they have worked with USDA extension agents.

    Earles also said smartphones could be a lower-cost way to use some AI systems without the overhead costs of more complex technology.

    “I think there is an opportunity for using things people already own. Our phones are loaded with many types of sensors. We may not realize it but there are probably 15 different types of sensors on your cameras. So I think there is an opportunity for smaller farmers,” he said.

    Luján asked about the ease of Spanish-speaking farmers or workers making use of AI products in the U.S.

    Earles, who has founded an agriculture startup, said that market shouldn’t be ignored.

    “If someone is not doing this, then the technology is not going to penetrate the market,” he said, adding that not adapting creates an obstacle “if there is not an effort to make Spanish first, or at least bilingual, in these tools, especially specialty crops where we have predominantly Spanish-speaking workers.”

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    © 2023 CQ-Roll Call, Inc

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • NYPD to freeze academy classes as New York City budget crisis looms, sources say

    The NYPD will freeze academy classes for the foreseeable future as the city braces for “extremely painful” spending cuts set to be unveiled by Mayor Eric Adams on Thursday, the New York Daily News has learned.

    The mayor warned Tuesday that the city budget update he’s expected to release will contain a laundry list of deep cuts impacting every municipal agency and millions of New Yorkers.

    Mayor Eric Adams is pictured during in-person media availability in city hall Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2023, in Manhattan, New York. (Barry Williams for New York Daily News/TNS)

    “In all my time in government, this is probably one of the most painful exercises I’ve gone through,” Adams told reporters when speaking about the forthcoming belt-tightening during a City Hall briefing.

    Without going into specifics, Adams said Tuesday that the cuts are necessary to offset the hundreds of millions the city has shelled out to shelter and provide services for the tens of thousands of migrants who have arrived in the city since last year.

    Major spending reductions are also expected for the Fire Department of the City of New York, which is set to slash all overtime and also end any after-work training sessions and Ceremonial Unit activities with the exception of department funerals, a source with knowledge of the matter said.

    A hiring freeze has been in place across city government since October, but agencies that deal with public health and safety were exempt.

    When the new budget goes into effect, the public safety exemption ends, sources told the Daily News on Wednesday.

    Emails to both the NYPD and the FDNY for comment were not immediately returned.

    Adams spokesman Charles Lutvak declined to comment on the looming budget announcement, but referred to the mayor’s remarks Tuesday, when he hinted that the cuts will touch on NYPD operations.

    “When we look at around police, what the numbers of our police officers are going to be … it’s going to be extremely painful for New Yorkers,” he said.

    Adams first announced in September that the November budget modification plan would include 5% cuts for all city agencies.

    Unless the city receives a lot more federal and state migrant crisis aid, Adams warned in September that he will likely move to enact an additional 5% government-wide cut in January and yet another 5% in April — proposals that progressive Democrats have said would effectively wreck the city’s social safety net.

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    © 2023 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • A 16-year-old girl was viciously beaten at an LA-area high school. A security guard is accused of watching

    A 16-year-old girl has filed a claim against her local school district, saying she was brutally attacked outside a bathroom stall as other students — and a security guard — watched and filmed.

    The girl, who was not named, was attacked as she exited a bathroom stall at Baldwin Park High School on Oct. 18, according to video and a notice of claim filed against Baldwin Park Unified School District. The claim, which usually precedes the filing of a lawsuit, was first reported by Fox LA.

    “The safety of our students is the district’s highest priority,” a school district spokesperson said in a statement. “We cannot comment further on any potential litigation.”

    The second the student exits the stall, another girl begins hurling punches at her and pulling her hair as the victim tries to defend herself, video shows. The attack goes on for about a half-minute, as other students look on and record from the outside of the bathroom. She suffered a bloodied and broken nose. Attorneys for the girl claim that a security guard can be seen in the video watching the fight and smiling.

    Brian Claypool, the girl’s lawyer, alleges that a security guard for the school was among those watching and egging on the violence.

    “This security guard allowed both boys and girls to enter the girls bathroom and be spectators at a UFC fight,” said Claypool. “The fact that this security guard aided and abetted this ambush on my client and derived pleasure from watching is deplorable, barbaric and borders on criminal.”

    Claypool added that it was lucky the girl did not suffer further injuries.

    “She could have died in this fight. The victim could have fallen and hit her head and died,” he said.

    After the violence ended, the girl called her mother, who reported the incident to police. The girl was hospitalized.

    “When Claimant’s mother arrived at the school, she went straight to the office. School administration and office personnel were not even aware that Claimant had been attacked,” reads the notice of claim.

    Claypool called on Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón to bring charges against the security guard for “contributing to the delinquency of a minor.”

    The student attacked in the video withdrew from the school following the incident and is seeking a transfer to another school district, Claypool said.

    “As a mother I am really upset and concerned. How can I keep sending my daughter to school without worrying that something is going to happen to her?” said the mother of the girl beaten in the video.

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    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Pentagon fails 6th straight audit of trillions

    The Pentagon has once again failed to pass its annual audit, marking the sixth consecutive year of a failed audit. The repeated lack of a clean audit result highlights the complexity and vast scope of the Department of Defense’s (DoD) financial operations, encompassing $3.8 trillion in assets and $4 trillion in liabilities, spread across all 50 states and over 4,500 global sites.

    “Auditing the Department’s $3.8 trillion in assets and $4.0 trillion in liabilities is a massive undertaking,” Michael McCord, the DoD Under Secretary of Defense and Chief Financial Officer, said in a Pentagon press release. “But the improvements and changes we are making every day as a result of these audits positively affect every soldier, sailor, airman, marine, guardian, and DoD civilian.”  

    Despite the ongoing challenges, the Pentagon claims it has been able to make notable improvements since it started self-auditing in 2018, following a Congressional mandate in 1990, according to Defense News. The audit’s results show a pattern of incremental change, though significant hurdles remain.

    Out of the nearly 30 sub-audits conducted this year, only seven received a clean audit score, mirroring last year’s outcome. One was rated “qualified,” one level below clean, while three are still under review. The remaining 18 were graded as audit failures.

    Pentagon officials, including McCord, have expressed confidence in the progress being made despite the repeated audit failures. McCord emphasized three key areas of improvement, including closer ledger alignment with the Treasury Department, enhanced efficiency through automation, and refined stockpile management, as evidenced by the U.S.’s rapid response to Israel’s request for aid during its recent war with Hamas.

    READ MORE: Pentagon secretly sending foreign country more weapons: Report

    Nevertheless, given the audit’s pass-or-fail structure, the improvements have not yet translated into a successful overall result for the Pentagon. Defense News reported that half of the DoD’s assets still fail to meet auditing standards. McCord revealed that while 500 specific problems from last year’s audit were resolved, 2,500 new and recurring issues were identified this year.

    “It’s not enough,” McCord told reporters. “The secretary [of defense] feels that we need to be doing better at this and moving faster.”

    McCord also highlighted the Pentagon’s ongoing support for Ukraine and Israel. The U.S. has approximately $5 billion in stockpiles available for Kyiv, with $1 billion earmarked for replenishment. He noted a contrast in aiding Israel, citing limitations due to the absence of additional Congressional funding and Israel’s robust defense-industrial ties with the U.S.

    “The running room we have to actually help Israel is much more constrained [than it is for Ukraine] because we don’t have any action by Congress yet,” McCord stated.

    The Pentagon’s audit failures have not gone unnoticed on Capitol Hill. Over the summer, House Republicans held a hearing regarding the issue.

    “We are working hard to address audit findings as well as recommendations from the Government Accountability Office,” McCord said. “The Components are making good progress resulting in meaningful benefits, but we must do more, and we cannot do this alone.”

    The ongoing audit saga underscores the complexity and significance of financial management within the world’s largest defense establishment, reflecting both the challenges and the gradual advancements in the Pentagon’s quest for financial accountability and transparency.

    This news article was partially created with the assistance of artificial intelligence and edited and fact-checked by a human editor.



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  • Sea lion takes down shark in graphic video

    Video was shared on social media Wednesday that shows a sea lion brutally attacking and ripping apart a blue shark in Monterey Bay, California.

    The video footage posted online by ABC7 shows a sea lion tossing a blue shark out of the water, ripping apart its jaw, and swallowing it.

    The Daily Caller reported that California sea lions are not typically known for killing sharks. According to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries, sea lions usually feed on smaller prey.

    “California sea lions feed mainly offshore in coastal areas. They eat a variety of prey—such as squid, anchovies, mackerel, rockfish, and sardines—found in upwelling areas,” The NOAA Fisheries website states. “They also may take fish from commercial fishing gear, sport fishing lines, and fish passage facilities at dams and rivers.”

    The brutal sea lion takedown of the blue shark quickly provided widespread amusement online, as evidenced in a Reddit post discussion. After watching the video, one user wrote, “They’re not called ‘sea LIONS’ for nothing.” Another user warned, “Sea lions are vicious, seriously. I’ve seen people go up to pet them before, and they get real aggressive real fast.”

    READ MORE: ‘Cocaine sharks’ could be feeding on drugs, scientists say

    According to the Daily Mail, blue sharks are most often targeted in “finning” poaching operations, not sea lion attacks. The outlet noted that the practice of “finning,” which involves poaching the sharks for their fins and leaving the remains of the sharks in the ocean, is becoming more prominent.

    Dave Bader, from Marine Mammal Care Center, told the Daily Mail, “There used to be a whole lot more blue sharks. Blue sharks are a normal thing for these waters. But they’re one of the species that’s been heavily depleted by ‘finning,’ shark fishing.”

    While sea lion attacks against sharks may not be very common in California waters, one anonymous conservation expert told the Daily Mail, “Sharks are definitely on the menu.” Nevertheless, the conservationist said it is “interesting” to see a sea lion attack a blue shark “that big.”



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