Tag: Americas

  • Home nurse allegedly withheld food from child who went into liver failure

    CAPE CORAL, Fla. (TCN) — Authorities recently arrested a 62-year-old nurse on suspicion of neglecting and starving a child patient with several medical issues.

    According to the Cape Coral Police Department, on Sept. 15, 2024, officers responded to a home after a mother allegedly caught a home nurse, Kelly Perrigo, withholding food from her child. The mother reportedly said her child requires 24/7 medical care due to multiple medical conditions, and they have home health care nurses who work in 12-hour shifts.

    On the morning of Sept. 14, 2024, the victim’s mom allegedly spoke to Perrigo, who worked as the night nurse. Perrigo reportedly said the child “had low blood sugar and drank all of their nighttime bottles.” However, according to police, the mother reviewed surveillance footage from the victim’s room after Perrigo left and noticed that throughout the night, Perrigo “would heat the child’s bottle and attempt to feed the child for about two to five minutes, then put the child in the crib and leave the room with the full bottle.”

    The reporting party reportedly saw Perrigo on surveillance put an empty bottle in the sink but believes Perrigo emptied it in the bathroom sink before walking to the kitchen. The mother alleges Perrigo hasn’t fed her child any bottles since Aug. 17.

    Perrigo purportedly began caring for the victim in February 2024. Since then, the reporting party told police her child has “had issues with gaining weight, lack of energy, and has fallen into liver failure.” If her child doesn’t drink bottles, the nurses are told to feed the victim through a GI tube, but the mother never saw Perrigo do so on surveillance video. Police noted that Perrigo is a licensed practical nurse.

    Investigators obtained and reviewed the surveillance footage, which substantiated the mother’s statement.

    On Feb. 5, Perrigo went to the Cape Coral Police Department and was arrested on a charge of felony child neglect. Lee County Jail records show she was booked into their facility and later released on Feb. 6. Perrigo is scheduled to appear in court on March 10.

    MORE:

    • Nurse Arrested for Felony Child Neglect – Cape Coral Police Department
    • Lee County Jail

    Source: True Crime Daily

  • New Court Victory in Fani Willis Documents Case

    VICTORY: Court Orders DOJ to Provide Info on Jack Smith’s Communications with Fani Willis
    Judicial Watch Sues for Records on Kamala Harris Travel Costs
    Judicial Watch Asks Supreme Court to End Race-Based Congressional Districts
    Judicial Watch’s Covid Community Corps Case Illustrates Need to Cut Waste

     

    VICTORY: Court Orders DOJ to Provide Info on Jack Smith’s Communications with Fani Willis

    A federal court ordered the Department of Justice to provide information on communications between Special Counsel Jack Smith and District Attorney Fani Willis regarding the prosecution of then-former President Donald Trump.

    President Trump truly needs to overhaul the Justice Department from top to bottom. It is a scandal that a federal court had to order the Justice Department to admit the truth that their objections to producing records about collusion with Fani Willis had no basis in reality.

    The Justice Department had continued to object to providing any information even after its prosecutions against Trump were shut down.

    Judge Dabney L. Friedrich of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that because the cases against Trump were closed, the Justice Department’s arguments against disclosure were no longer applicable:

    Since DOJ filed its motion for summary judgment and supporting Declaration in March 2024, the Special Counsel’s criminal enforcement actions have been terminated…. The cases are “closed—not pending or contemplated—and therefore are not proceedings with which disclosure may interfere.” … Thus, the agency’s sole justification for invoking the Glomar doctrine under Exemption 7(A) is no longer applicable.

    Accordingly, the Court will deny DOJ’s motion for summary judgment and grant the plaintiff’s cross motion. DOJ is directed to process the plaintiff’s FOIA [Freedom of Information Act] request and either “disclose any [responsive] records or establish both that their contents are exempt from disclosure and that such exemption has not also been waived.”

    We sued in October 2023 after the Department of Justice failed to comply with an August 2023 FOIA request for records detailing the “Fulton County District Attorney’s Office’s requesting or receiving federal funds or other federal assistance … regarding the investigation of former President Donald Trump” and others (Judicial Watch v U.S. Department of Justice (No. 23-cv-03110).

    On December 18, 2023, the Justice Department issued its final response to this request, refusing to confirm or deny the existence of responsive records. It argued that releasing the records could be reasonably expected to interfere with enforcement proceedings. The Justice Department refused to change its position or inform the court in light of the “proceedings” against Trump that were shut down.

    The court has now ordered Justice to meet with us on or before February 21, 2025, and to report the status of the discussion to the court.

    We have several FOIA lawsuits related to the prosecutorial abuse targeting Trump:

    In January 2025, the Superior Court in Fulton County, GA, issued an order granting $21,578 “attorney’s fees and costs” in the open records lawsuit for communications Willis had with Special Counsel Jack Smith and the House January 6 Committee. We recently received payment.

    In February 2024, the U.S. Department of Justice asked a federal court to allow the agency to keep secret the names of top staffers working in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s office that is targeting former President Donald Trump and other Americans.

    (Before his appointment to investigate and prosecute Trump, Special Counsel Jack Smith previously was at the center of several controversial issues, the IRS scandal among them. In 2014, a Judicial Watch investigation revealed that top IRS officials had been in communication with Jack Smith’s then-Public Integrity Section about a plan to launch criminal investigations into conservative tax-exempt groups. Read more here.)

    In January 2024, we filed a lawsuit against Fulton County, Georgia, for records regarding the hiring of Nathan Wade as a special prosecutor by District Attorney Fani Willis. Wade was hired to pursue unprecedented criminal investigations and prosecutions against former President Trump and others over the 2020 election disputes.

    Through the New York Freedom of Information Law, in July 2023, we received the engagement letter showing New York County District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg paid $900 per hour for partners and $500 per hour for associates to the Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher law firm for the purpose of suing Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) in an effort to shut down the House Judiciary Committee’s oversight investigation into Bragg’s unprecedented indictment of former President Donald Trump.

     

    Judicial Watch Sues for Records on Kamala Harris Travel Costs

    It seems rather obvious that, in order to help Kamala Harris’s campaign, Biden agencies hid details of her international jaunts.

    That’s my conclusion, as Judicial Watch was forced to file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Defense for former Vice President Kamala Harris’ VIP travel records (Judicial Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Homeland Security (No. 1:25-cv-00233)).

    We sued after the Secret Service and the Air Force failed to respond to August 2024 requests for: “All records concerning use of U.S Government funds to provide security and/or other services to Vice President Kamala Harris and any companions while traveling.”

    The Biden White House website reports that during her term as vice president, Kamala Harris made “17 foreign trips, traveling to 21 countries and meeting with over 150 world leaders …” There are no publicly available flight logs or other records that provide details about who accompanied her on these trips.

    Just before her last official trip in early January 2025, AP reported that her husband, Doug Emhoff, was expected to accompany her to Singapore, Bahrain and Germany. However, this is the only non-governmental person specifically mentioned as accompanying her on any official trip.

    Our investigations into government travel records are extensive.

    In 2021, we uncovered White House travel records from the Secret Service in response to FOIA requests for all records concerning the use of U.S. government funds to provide security and/or any other services to President Biden and any companions. These records detailed Secret Service travel costs of $2,252,600.50 for President Joe Biden through August 8, 2021, for travel to Delaware and other domestic locations.

    In June 2020, we received records from the U.S. Secret Service showing that during the first five-and-a-half years of the Obama administration, Hunter Biden traveled extensively while receiving a Secret Service protective detail. During the time period of the records provided, Hunter Biden took 411 separate domestic and international flights, including to 29 different foreign countries. He visited China five times. (During the last year and a half of the Obama administration, Hunter Biden served on the board of Ukrainian energy firm Burisma Holdings while his father was heading up Ukraine policy.)

    In September 2018, we sued for information on the travel expenses of President Trump. From a separate lawsuit, Secret Service produced expense records totaling $3,024,036.50, which brought the known total for presidential travel expenses at that time to $17,224,938.46 and included the operation of Air Force One.

    In September 2017, we obtained travel records from the Secret Service in response to a FOIA lawsuit, which brought the known total of travel expenses for former President Barack Obama and his family to $105,662,975.27. To date, Judicial Watch has uncovered total travel expenses of the Obamas amounting to $114,691,322.17.

    In 2016, we sued for records concerning travel costs for members of Congress.

    In 2011, we reported on records detailing a massive Pelosi-led bipartisan congressional junket to the Detroit Auto Show, as well as records showing Michelle Obama’s family trip to Africa cost taxpayers at least $424,142.

    We uncovered that the Obama’s 2009 “date night” trip to New York for dinner and a Broadway show cost taxpayers over $11,000 in Secret Service costs alone.

    Beginning in 2009, after the media failed to follow up on concerns raised about Nancy Pelosi’s use of luxury Air Force jets to travel between her congressional district and DC, our FOIA requests exposed her abuse of this travel perk. We uncovered that Pelosi’s military travel to Italy and Ukraine in 2015 cost the taxpayers $184,587.81, as well as $2,100,744.59 over one two-year period — $101,429.14 of which was for in-flight expenses, including food and alcohol.

     

    Judicial Watch Asks Supreme Court to End Race-Based Congressional Districts

    The Left, with the help of the courts, wants to keep using race as a basis for creating congressional districts.

    We filed an amici curiae (friend of the court) brief along with the Allied Educational Foundation (AEF), asking the Supreme Court to eliminate this woke, race-based congressional districting and ban the use of racial preferences in drawing up “majority minority” districts.

    Judicial Watch and AEF ask the court to affirm a lower court ruling that would prevent specifically crowding minority voters into congressional districts.

    This amici brief comes in the case Louisiana v. Phillip Callais et al. (No. 24-109), which is on appeal from the U.S. District Court Western District of Louisiana where the lower court ruled 2-1 to stop the use of a racially-drawn congressional map for future elections.

    In our amici brief, we and AEF argue:

    This Court has compared race-based districting to segregation of “public parks, . . . buses, . . . and schools,” and warned that we “should not be carving electorates into racial blocs.”

    There should be no question that race-based division of citizens for purposes of redistricting is a violation of the Equal Protection Clause, the “central purpose” of which “is to prevent the States from purposefully discriminating between individuals on the basis of race….” Racial gerrymandering, like all “[r]acial classifications of any sort” cause “lasting harm to our society” because “[t]hey reinforce the belief, held by too many for too much of our history, that individuals should be judged by the color of their skin.”

    In March 2022, a Maryland court ruled in favor of our challenge to the Democratic state legislature’s “extreme” congressional-districts gerrymander.

    The Biden administration jumped into this case at the last minute, seeking to maintain the race-based status quo requiring separating and segregating voters by race for congressional elections. The Trump Justice Department should urge the court to restore non-discrimination as the foundation of voting rights once again.

    The Allied Educational Foundation is a charitable and educational foundation dedicated to improving the quality of life through education. In furtherance of that goal, the foundation has engaged in a number of projects, which include, but are not limited to, educational and health conferences domestically and abroad. AEF has partnered frequently with us to fight government and judicial corruption and to promote a return to ethics and morality in the nation’s public life.

    We are a national leader in voting integrity and voting rights. We assembled a team of highly experienced voting rights attorneys who stopped discriminatory elections in Hawaii, and cleaned up voter rolls in California, Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, among other achievements.

    Robert Popper, a Judicial Watch senior attorney, leads its election law program. Popper was previously in the Voting Section of the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department, where he managed voting rights investigations, litigations, consent decrees, and settlements in dozens of states.

    In November last year we filed a petition for a writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court challenging the decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in the case filed on behalf of Congressman Mike Bost and two presidential electors from Illinois to prevent state election officials from extending Election Day for 14 days beyond the date established by federal law (Rep. Michael J. Bost et al. v. Illinois State Board of Elections and Bernadette Matthews (No. 1:22-cv-02754, 23-2644)).

    In May 2024, we sued California under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA) to force it to clean up its voter rolls. The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Judicial Watch and the Libertarian Party of California, asks the court to compel California to make “a reasonable effort to remove the registrations of ineligible registrants from the voter rolls” as required by federal law.

    In March 2024, Judicial Watch, Breakthrough Ideas, Illinois Family Action, and Carol J. Davis sued Illinois officials under the NVRA to force them to clean the State’s voter rolls.

    In December 2023, a notice letter was sent to election officials in the District of Columbia notifying them of evident violations of the NVRA, based on their failure to remove inactive voters from their registration rolls. The letter pointed out that D.C. publicly reported removing few or no ineligible voter registrations under a key provision of the NVRA. The letter threatened a federal lawsuit unless the violations were corrected in a timely fashion. In response to Judicial Watch’s inquiries, Washington, DC, officials admitted that they had not complied with the NVRA, promptly removed 65,544 outdated names from the voting rolls, promised to remove 37,962 more, and designated another 73,522 registrations as “inactive.”

    In July 2023 Judicial Watch filed an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief, supporting the decision of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maine, which struck down Maine’s policy restricting the use and distribution of the state’s voter registration list.

    We have had other election law victories in Illinois, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Los Angeles County, New York City, and Kentucky, as well as North Carolina.

     

    Judicial Watch’s Covid Community Corps Case Illustrates Need to Cut Waste

    We’ve been exposing government waste for years, and we’re delighted with President Trump’s efforts through his Department of Government Efficiency. Our Corruption Chronicles blog has one example of our independent work exposing waste, fraud, and abuse:

    President Trump’s temporary funding freeze to reign in Biden’s spending binge has ignited outrage among the left, and an ongoing Judicial Watch case that has already exposed $505 million dollars (and counting) in government waste helps illustrate why the new order is vital to protect American taxpayers. It involves awarding billions of dollars to a “grassroots network of community leaders people know and trust” to propagandize and politicize the controversial Covid vaccine by, among other things, increasing vaccine uptake in vulnerable and minority communities. It was part of a $3 billion program to support outreach efforts in states by using a specially createdCovid-19 Community Corps operated by leftists. Judicial Watch requested records from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and was forced to sue in federal court because the government failed to provide the documents, which are still trickling in under the terms of the lawsuit.

    It is likely that the scandal-plagued program, which was only exposed because Judicial Watch litigated to obtain records, would receive scrutiny under the new Trump rules aimed at cutting government waste. The policy has caused outrage among many Democrats as well as liberal groups that benefited financially from Biden’s government cash giveaway. The brouhaha was triggered by a memorandum issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which oversees the performance of federal agencies and administers the federal budget, to the heads of executive departments and agencies calling for a temporary pause of grants, loans and other financial assistance programs. “Financial assistance should be dedicated to advancing Administration priorities, focusing taxpayer dollars to advance a stronger and safer America, eliminating the financial burden of inflation for citizens, unleashing American energy and manufacturing, ending ‘wokeness’ and the weaponization of government, promoting efficiency in government, and Making America Healthy Again,” the memo reads. It also says that the use of federal resources to advance Marxist equity, transgenderism, and green new deal social engineering policies is a waste of taxpayer dollars that fails to improve the lives of those they serve.

    To implement the new policy each agency is asked to complete a comprehensive analysis of programs to identify those that may be implicated by any of Trump’s executive orders. “In the interim, to the extent permissible under applicable law, Federal agencies must temporarily pause all activities related to obligation or disbursement of all Federal financial assistance, and other relevant agency activities that may be implicated by the executive orders, including, but not limited to, financial assistance for foreign aid, nongovernmental organizations, DEI [Diversity, Equity and Inclusion], woke gender ideology, and the green new deal,” the OMB memo states. “This temporary pause will provide the Administration time to review agency programs and determine the best uses of the funding for those programs consistent with the law and the President’s priorities.” Federal agencies are also directed to pause all activities associated with open federal funding announcements officially known as Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO).

    The funding pause is necessary because the administration must review federal programs to ensure that they are being executed in accordance with the law and the new president’s policies, a White House statement explains. One mainstream newspaper reported that the move to crack down on waste “caused mass chaos and confusion across Washington.” Another major paper referred to it as an “explosive Trump administrative order that froze trillions of dollars of federal grants and loans” and received “widespread condemnation and confusion.” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt clarified to a hostile mainstream media that specializes in trashing all things Trump that efforts to “end the egregious waste of federal funding” will continue.

    Judicial Watch’s Covid-19 Community Corps case is one of many that can be used to demonstrate why the new Trump order is essential to evaluate future expenditures. The records we obtained reveal that one notable recipient of taxpayer dollars to promote vaccines under Biden’s multi-billion-dollar plan is the Washington, D.C., Episcopal Diocese, whose leftist bishop, Mariann Edgar Budde, politicized her recent presidential inauguration sermon at the National Cathedral by urging Trump to show mercy to illegal immigrants as well as LGBTQ+ individuals.

    Until next week,

    Source: Judicial Watch

  • Woman who said she was God and killed best friend’s husband found not guilty by reason of insanity

    JOHNSON COUNTY, Ind. (TCN) — A judge determined that a woman who claimed to be God and shot her friend’s husband in the face was not guilty by reason of insanity.

    Court records show Judge Andrew Roesener returned Alicia Haupt’s verdict for charges of murder, pointing a firearm at another, and attempted murder on Jan. 30 following a bench trial, meaning the case was presented in front of a judge rather than a jury.

    Haupt’s verdict came almost exactly one year after she shot and killed 35-year-old Jacob Harville on Feb. 5, 2024. According to WXIN-TV, a Johnson County Sheriff’s Office deputy made contact with Haupt on Feb. 5, 2024, when she was walking near a GMC Sierra. Haupt reportedly told the deputy the car did not belong to her, but rather it was “the man who I shot in the face’s truck.” Haupt reportedly called herself “God” and said she killed Satan “before he killed us all.”

    WXIN reports Haupt lived with Harville and his wife, who she called her “best friend.” After shooting Harville, she reportedly pointed the gun at his mother, but the firearm malfunctioned.

    According to the Daily Journal, Harville’s wife reportedly once took Haupt to the hospital because she claimed she had someone else living inside of her body. Haupt was diagnosed with schizophrenia and psychosis in 2022.

    Judge Roesener reportedly acknowledged at Haupt’s sentencing hearing that she killed Harville, but she could not “appreciate the wrongfulness of her conduct.” Roesener told prosecutors to file a petition that would commit Haupt to a mental health facility, which they did before the sentencing hearing ended.

    Roesener said, “I see and feel the heartaches, the sadness, the anger.”

    WXIN reports Harville’s father expressed following the decision, “This is not right. It’s not justice for my son, Jacob Harville. It’s no justice whatsoever.”

    MORE:

    • State of Indiana v. Alicia Marie Haupt
    • Woman who claimed she was God found not responsible by reason of insanity in deadly Johnson County shooting – WXIN
    • Urmeyville woman charged with murder found not responsible due to insanity – Daily Journal
    • Shooting survivor, victim’s wife testify on Urmeyville murder trial’s second day, 1/17/2025 – TCN

    Source: True Crime Daily

  • Okla. couple sentenced for tying teen girl to tree over the span of 3 days

    BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (TCN) — A man and his girlfriend will both spend several decades behind bars for tying his teenage daughter to a tree with ratchet straps over the course of three days.

    Court records show Johnny James pleaded guilty on Feb. 5 to child neglect and child abuse, and a judge sentenced him to 35 years in prison. James’ girlfriend, Kayla Clark, also entered a guilty plea to child neglect and enabling child abuse. She was handed a 30-year sentence.

    According to Bartlesville Radio, on July 28, 2024, Washington County Sheriff’s Office deputies were called to a home in Vera regarding alleged abuse of a 15-year-old girl. When they arrived, they located the teen bound to a tree and sleeping on a piece of carpet. The victim, James’ daughter, was reportedly in town from Texas. Deputies said the girl had been tied to the tree multiple times over the span of 72 hours.

    The Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise reports James told authorities he left the girl outside because she was having problems urinating and defecating in the house. She reportedly has developmental problems, and he attached her to the tree to avoid any future accidents inside. James reportedly also said he did it as punishment because the teen wanted to live with her mother.

    KOTV-TV journalist Lori Fullbright reports that a passerby noticed the victim bound to the tree with ratchet straps, so she pulled over to help. The victim reportedly had “a hole on her leg and lesions on her arm and it appeared the girl had been there for days.”

    James said he only left her there for about an hour, but confessed that it wasn’t the first time he utilized this form of punishment.

    Clark reportedly told deputies that she was in the shower when James tied his daughter up, and she didn’t notice the victim when they went to church because she was “frazzled.”

    The Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise reports some of James’ family members did not report the suspected abuse because they were afraid of him.

    MORE:

    • State of Oklahoma vs. Johnny James
    • State of Oklahoma vs. Kayla Clark

    Source: True Crime Daily

  • Arizona man who killed ex, set her body on fire, and abandoned baby on the side of road is sentenced

    PHOENIX (TCN) — A 27-year-old man will spend the rest of his life behind bars for killing his ex-girlfriend on the day they were supposed to take a paternity test.

    The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office announced Feb. 7 that Antwaun Ware pleaded guilty to first-degree felony murder and endangerment in connection with the death of Jasmine Dunbar. He subsequently received a life sentence.

    According to prosecutors, in March 2018, a couple discovered a 7-month-old infant in a car seat on the side of the road while driving near 83rd Avenue and Camelback Road. Dunbar’s ID and other belongings were also near the baby. Upon further investigation, Phoenix Police learned that on that same day, Ware and Dunbar were going to take a paternity test.

    Detectives determined Ware drove to a field near 107th Avenue and Camelback Road and killed Dunbar before setting her body on fire.

    According to the Arizona Republic, Ware admitted to police that he assaulted Dunbar during an argument in the car, then left the baby near the road because he hoped someone would find her.

    Police used Ware’s cellphone data to track down the location of Dunbar’s charred remains.

    County Attorney Rachel Mitchell said, “This defendant’s callous actions have no place in our community. Thanks to the hard work of my prosecutors, he will live the rest of his life behind bars. To the people who rescued this baby, I say thank you. This child is alive today because of your heroic actions.”

    MORE:

    • Acquaintance Sentenced to Life in Young Mother’s Murder – Maricopa County Attorney’s Office
    • Arizona man sentenced to life for killing ex-girlfriend, setting body on fire – Arizona Republic

    Source: True Crime Daily

  • Teen acquitted for mom’s death after charges dropped in dad’s killing; A$AP Rocky’s assault trial – TCN Sidebar

    In this episode of True Crime News The Sidebar Podcast: Dina Doll joins host Joshua Ritter to break down the biggest cases making headlines across the nation. They discuss Collin Griffith being acquitted of killing his mother, Catherine Griffith, after charges were dropped for the death of his father, the emotional outburst of Terell “A$SAP Relli” Ephron in the felony assault trial of Rakim “A$AP Rocky” Mayers, and the ongoing legal battle between Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively as attorneys for both stars hurl allegations of defamation and harassment.

    YouTube: Teen acquitted for mom’s death after charges dropped in dad’s killing; A$AP Rocky’s assault trial

    Source: True Crime Daily

  • Judicial Watch, Allied Educational Foundation File Amici Brief Asking Supreme Court to Eliminate Woke, Race-Based Congressional Districts

    (Washington, DC)Judicial Watch announced today it filed in the U.S. Supreme Court an amici curiae (friend of the court) brief along with the Allied Educational Foundation (AEF), asking the court to eliminate woke, race-based congressional districting and ban the use racial preferences in drawing up “majority minority” congressional districts.

    Judicial Watch and AEF ask the court to affirm a lower court ruling which would prevent specifically crowding minority voters into congressional districts.

    This Judicial Watch amici brief comes in the case Louisiana v. Phillip Callais et al. (No. 24-109), which is on appeal from the U.S. District Court Western District of Louisiana where the lower court ruled 2-1 to stop the use of a racially-drawn congressional map for future elections.

    In their amici brief, Judicial Watch and AEF argue:

    This Court has compared race-based districting to segregation of “public parks, . . . buses, . . . and schools,” and warned that we “should not be carving electorates into racial blocs.”

    There should be no question that race-based division of citizens for purposes of redistricting is a violation of the Equal Protection Clause, the “central purpose” of which “is to prevent the States from purposefully discriminating between individuals on the basis of race….” Racial gerrymandering, like all “[r]acial classifications of any sort” cause “lasting harm to our society” because “[t]hey reinforce the belief, held by too many for too much of our history, that individuals should be judged by the color of their skin.”

    In March 2022, a Maryland court ruled in favor of Judicial Watch’s challenge to the Democratic state legislature’s “extreme” congressional-districts gerrymander.

    “We are asking Supreme Court to put an end to race-based congressional districting,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “The Biden administration jumped into this case at the last minute, seeking to maintain the race-based status quo requiring separating and segregating voters by race for congressional elections. The Trump Justice Department should, instead, urge the court should restore non-discrimination as the foundation of voting rights once again.”

    The Allied Educational Foundation is a charitable and educational foundation dedicated to improving the quality of life through education. In furtherance of that goal, the Foundation has engaged in a number of projects, which include, but are not limited to, educational and health conferences domestically and abroad. AEF has partnered frequently with Judicial Watch to fight government and judicial corruption and to promote a return to ethics and morality in the nation’s public life.

    Judicial Watch is a national leader in voting integrity and voting rights. As part of its work, Judicial Watch assembled a team of highly experienced voting rights attorneys who stopped discriminatory elections in Hawaii, and cleaned up voter rolls in California, Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, among other achievements.

    Robert Popper, a Judicial Watch senior attorney, leads its election law program. Popper was previously in the Voting Section of the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department, where he managed voting rights investigations, litigations, consent decrees, and settlements in dozens of states.

    In November last year, Judicial Watch filed a petition for a writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court challenging the decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in the case filed on behalf of Congressman Mike Bost and two presidential electors from Illinois to prevent state election officials from extending Election Day for 14 days beyond the date established by federal law (Rep. Michael J. Bost et al. v. Illinois State Board of Elections and Bernadette Matthews (No. 1:22-cv-02754, 23-2644)). 

    In May 2024, Judicial Watch sued California under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA) to force it to clean up its voter rolls. The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Judicial Watch and the Libertarian Party of California, asks the court to compel California to make “a reasonable effort to remove the registrations of ineligible registrants from the voter rolls” as required by federal law (Judicial Watch Inc. and the Libertarian Party of CA v. Shirley Weber et al. (No. 2:24-cv-3750)).

    In March 2024, Judicial Watch, Breakthrough Ideas, Illinois Family Action, and Carol J. Davis sued Illinois officials under the NVRA to force them to clean the State’s voter rolls. (Judicial Watch Inc., et al., v. Illinois State Board of Elections, et al. (No. 1:24-cv-01867).

    In December 2023, a notice letter was sent to election officials in the District of Columbia notifying them of evident violations of the NVRA, based on their failure to remove inactive voters from their registration rolls. The letter pointed out that D.C. publicly reported removing few or no ineligible voter registrations under a key provision of the NVRA. The letter threatened a federal lawsuit unless the violations were corrected in a timely fashion. In response to Judicial Watch’s inquiries, Washington, DC, officials admitted that they had not complied with the NVRA, promptly removed 65,544 outdated names from the voting rolls, promised to remove 37,962 more, and designated another 73,522 registrations as “inactive.”

    In July 2023 Judicial Watch filed an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief, supporting the decision of the U.S. District Court for the District of Maine, which struck down Maine’s policy restricting the use and distribution of the state’s voter registration list (Public Interest Legal Foundation v. Shenna Bellows (No. 23-1361). According to a national study conducted by Judicial Watch in 2020, Maine’s statewide registration rate was 101% of eligible voters.

    Judicial Watch in July 2023 also settled a federal election integrity lawsuit on behalf of the Illinois Conservative Union against the state of Illinois, the Illinois State Board of Elections, and its director, which now grants access to the current centralized statewide list of registered voters for the state for the past 15 elections.

    In April 2023, Pennsylvania settled with Judicial Watch and admitted in court filings that it removed 178,258 ineligible registrations in response to communications from Judicial Watch. The settlement commits Pennsylvania and five of its counties to extensive public reporting of statistics regarding their ongoing voter roll clean-up efforts for the next five years.

    In March 2023, Colorado agreed to settle a Judicial Watch NVRA lawsuit alleging that Colorado failed to remove ineligible voters from its rolls. The settlement agreement requires Colorado to provide Judicial Watch with the most recent voter roll data for each Colorado county each year for six years.

    In February 2023, Los Angeles County confirmed the removal of 1,207,613 ineligible voters from its rolls since last year, under the terms of a settlement agreement in a federal lawsuit Judicial Watch filed in 2017.

    Judicial Watch settled a federal election integrity lawsuit against New York City after the city removed 441,083 ineligible names from the voter rolls and promised to take reasonable steps going forward to clean its voter registration lists.

    Kentucky also removed hundreds of thousands of old registrations after it entered into a consent decree to end another Judicial Watch lawsuit.

    In February 2022, Judicial Watch settled a voter roll clean-up lawsuit against North Carolina and two of its counties after North Carolina removed over 430,000 inactive registrations from its voter rolls.

    ###

    Source: Judicial Watch

  • La. babysitter arrested after 3-month-old infant dies of brain bleed and multiple skull fractures

    LAKE CHARLES, La. (TCN) — Authorities recently arrested a 40-year-old woman after an infant in her care died from severe brain injuries.

    According to the Calcasieu Parish Sheriff’s Office, on the evening of Wednesday, Jan. 22, deputies responded to a local hospital in reference to an unresponsive 3-month-old baby, identified by KPLC-TV as Kairo Anderson.

    Investigators discovered the infant suffered a massive brain bleed and multiple skull fractures believed to be consistent with trauma. Anderson was airlifted to a different hospital and died from his injuries.

    According to the sheriff’s office, Shirley Sawyer was caring for the baby at the time. Kairo Anderson’s mother, Symone Anderson, reportedly said when she arrived at Sawyer’s home, “she believed the baby to be asleep, but a short time later, discovered the child was limp and unresponsive.” Symone Anderson then rushed the infant to the hospital.

    On Feb. 3, detectives issued a warrant for Sawyer and arrested her on a charge of first-degree murder. She remains held in the Calcasieu Correctional Center on $2.5 million bond.

    Symone Anderson told KPLC, “I’m just happy that my baby can rest now in peace.”

    She added, “I’ve been knowing this girl Sawyer for a minute, and I couldn’t believe it. Like, you smiled in my face, and you killed my baby behind my back.”

    Anderson reportedly moved to Louisiana from California to help care for her mother and give birth to the victim, but she had plans to return to California this month with her son.

    MORE:

    • CPSO Arrest Woman for Murder – Calcasieu Parish Sheriff’s Office
    • ‘You smiled in my face and you killed my baby behind my back’: Babysitter facing murder charge in 3-month-old’s death – KPLC

    Source: True Crime Daily

  • Man allegedly used paranormal meter, killed girlfriend thinking she was going to kill and eat him

    NORTHUMBERLAND COUNTY, Pa. (TCN) — A 46-year-old man will head to trial for allegedly fatally shooting his girlfriend because he became worried that she was going to kill and eat him.

    Court dockets show Jared Wolfe appeared in court Feb. 4 and will be formally arraigned on Feb. 24 on charges of first-degree murder, third-degree murder, firearm possession without a license, aggravated assault with attempts to cause serious bodily harm, aggravated assault with attempts to cause bodily harm with a deadly weapon, simple assault, and recklessly endangering another person.

    According to Penn Live, Wolfe is accused of killing his girlfriend of seven years, Jane White, on Jan. 3 after they smoked marijuana with two other people. He was brought into custody the same day.

    Court documents cited by WVIA-FM say Wolfe was “unsure of exactly what they all smoked” when he and White went to his friends’ apartment. Not long after smoking, he reportedly “used a paranormal meter to check a statue for energy and received a high reading of paranormal activity, which made him feel very scared.”

    Wolfe allegedly believed that one of the two other friends “was trying to put a white rag with something on it over his mouth with the intent to harm him.” He also allegedly became convinced that White and the other two men “were all trying to kill him and eat him, so he panicked and ran out of the house to retrieve his handgun from his vehicle.”

    Wolfe reportedly loaded the gun and shot White as she opened the car door.

    Wolfe’s arrest affidavit says he drove to his brother’s house following the shooting. The brother took the gun away from Wolfe and called police. Police went to the brother’s house and the brother showed officers that he hid Wolfe’s gun under the couch. He also said he brought out his own firearm when Wolfe showed up holding a 9 mm handgun.

    Once in custody, Wolfe reportedly told investigators he was “too messed up” to render aid to White after he shot her.

    Police went to the home where the Wolfe, White, and the two others smoked and discovered “a large amount of suspected synthetic marijuana and multiple smoking devices.”

    Penn Live reports investigators located a gun and paranormal meter in Wolfe’s vehicle.

    Wolfe is in custody at the Northumberland County Jail, where he is being held without bail.

    Wolfe’s defense attorneys said at the court hearing Feb. 4 that there is a possibility they will cite mental health as the reason for the shooting. Northumberland County District Attorney Michael O’Donnell added he will not seek the death penalty against Wolfe.

    MORE:

    • Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Jared Wolfe
    • Man headed to trial in Pa. homicide case related to paranormal activity – Penn Live
    • Police: Northumberland man charged with murder thought he would be eaten, 1/7/2025 – WVIA

    Source: True Crime Daily

  • Amber Alert issued for missing pregnant 16-year-old who is believed to be with 40-year-old boyfriend

    BEAVER DAM, Wis. (TCN) — Authorities are searching for a pregnant 16-year-old who police believe ran away with the 40-year-old father of her child after they met online.

    Sophia Franklin was reported missing to the Beaver Dam Police Department on Feb. 3. Police said she was last seen at her home the night prior at around 9 p.m., but she likely left at 7:48 a.m. on Feb. 3 with Gary Day in a black Buick LaCrosse with Arkansas license plates. Beaver Dam Police said the two “are believed to no longer be in Beaver Dam,” and there is a no-contact order between them.

    Police said in an update that the car was tracked with Pennsylvania plates, but the car “has utilized various license plates.”

    Beaver Dam Police issued an Amber Alert for Franklin, who is three months pregnant.

    There is a warrant out for Day’s arrest on charges of two counts of child abduction and two counts of child enticement.

    Day pleaded guilty in May 2020 to child endangerment in Arkansas and was sentenced to six years of probation. Court documents show he broke his probation by traveling out of Arkansas, among other violations.

    WKOW-TV reports Franklin’s parents told police that the teen snuck out of the house and often messaged strangers online. In July, she reportedly didn’t come home one night, but her parents believed she was staying at a friend’s house. They still communicated with Franklin over the phone, but didn’t see her.

    Day allegedly picked Franklin up in Wisconsin on July 29, and they got to Arkansas on Aug. 1. In December, authorities in Arkansas called Franklin’s parents and told them she was there. Franklin allegedly confessed to lying to her parents regarding her whereabouts, but she claimed she wanted to be with Day rather than her family.

    Franklin reportedly said she and Day waited to have sex until they got to Arkansas because “they knew it was illegal in Wisconsin and Illinois.” She later returned to Wisconsin, but the two continued talking.

    According to court records cited by KARK-TV, Day knew she was 16 and that she was pregnant with his child.

    Franklin reportedly has a no-contact order against Day, which the court issued on Franklin’s behalf. Franklin’s dad told investigators he saw a man who resembled Day on surveillance video entering his home and again behind the house.

    MORE:

    • Amber Alert / Missing Juvenile – Beaver Dam Police Department
    • State of Wisconsin vs. Gary Francis Day
    • State of Arkansas v. Gary Day
    • Amber Alert Wisconsin
    • Court documents reveal new information into missing Beaver Dam 16-year-old girl – WKOW
    • AMBER Alert suspect from Arkansas facing Wisconsin charges, teen still missing – KARK

    Source: True Crime Daily