Friday, July 04, 2025

Can Trump Deport U.S. Citizens Like Elon Musk and Zohran Mamdani?



Chad de Guzman
Fri, July 4, 2025 
TIME

LONG READ

Donald Trump promised mass deportation, campaigning against undocumented immigrants as a scapegoat for Americans’ economic woes, crime concerns, and more. But since taking office, the President has expressed openness to deporting not just undocumented immigrants but U.S. citizens too.

When asked earlier this week whether he’d deport his former advisor, tech billionaire Elon Musk, amid Musk’s criticisms of the “Big Beautiful Bill,” Trump said “we’ll have to take a look.” Musk, who was born in South Africa, became a U.S. citizen in 2002.

Later the same day, Trump called the citizenship status of New York City’s Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani into question, asserting: “A lot of people are saying he’s here illegally. We’re going to look at everything.” Mamdani, who was born in Uganda, became a U.S. citizen in 2018.

Trump also threatened to arrest Mamdani if he interfered with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) actions, to which Mamdani responded in a statement: “The President of the United States just threatened to have me arrested, stripped of my citizenship, put in a detention camp and deported. Not because I have broken any law but because I will refuse to let ICE terrorize our city.”

The Trump Administration has already pursued policies that strip migrants, including international students and humanitarian parolees, of their visas and legal statuses to be in the country, and it has reportedly deported several U.S.-born children along with their foreign-born parents as it seeks to redefine birthright citizenship.

The President has also repeatedly suggested that U.S. citizens who are convicted of violent crimes should be deported to foreign prisons.

“We’ll have to find that out legally. I’m just saying if we had the legal right to do it, I would do it in a heartbeat,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday. “I don’t know if we do or not, we’re looking at that right now.”

Legal experts have said that deporting U.S. citizens for any reason is unconstitutional, but the Trump Administration appears to be circumventing that restriction by pushing to strip citizenship from certain people, through a process known as denaturalization. While denaturalization can only apply to naturalized citizens, that group is estimated to number more than 25 million, or more than 7% of the U.S. population.

Here’s what to know.

The history of denaturalization

Denaturalization has a long and complex history in the United States.

Patrick Weil, a historian and director of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research and visiting professor of law at Yale University, wrote a book on it in 2012 called The Sovereign Citizen: Denaturalization and the Origins of the American Republic.

In it, Weil argues that the institution and evolution of denaturalization “made a quiet yet major contribution to the transformation of contemporary American citizenship.”

Through changes in law and Supreme Court rulings, denaturalization went from a process that was broadly used to make the citizenship of foreign-born Americans conditional on their behavior to a rare practice that, because of its high threshold, Weil argues, reifies the near inviolability of U.S. citizenship, naturalized or otherwise.

While Weil outlines a number of laws, court cases, and executive-branch actions that shaped denaturalization over the years, the three main turning points came in 1906, 1940, and 1967.
When the Naturalization Act of 1906 was passed to try to federalize naturalization processes, it included a provision on denaturalization that Weil writes “was originally and primarily conceived as a means of redressing naturalization fraud and illegality committed prior to or during the naturalization process itself—before the moment an alien obtained American citizenship.” In reality, however, in the following decades, most denaturalizations “occurred out of a desire to expel from the body politic ‘un-American’ citizens: most of them not for fraud or illegality committed before they were naturalized, but because of who they were or what they had done after they obtained American citizenship.”

“Denaturalization became a means for cleansing the American body politic of those naturalized citizens who behaved in ways considered un-American, due to their attachment to a ‘foreign’ morality or to their race, land of origin, or political ideas—sometimes before their naturalization, but, most often, developed afterward,” Weil writes. It became “a tool for ridding the American citizenry of ‘undesirables.’”

“If a naturalized citizen was Asian, spoke out against war, was a Socialist, a Communist, or a fascist, or lived abroad, she risked the loss of her American citizenship,” Weil writes, though he noted that: “from 1906 until the end of the 1930s, denaturalizations for political or racial reasons numbered fewer than one hundred. The majority of cases continued to revolve—at a pace of hundreds some years—around foreign-born Americans residing abroad.”

During World War II, denaturalization “became an integral part of a proactive program by the Justice Department to bolster national security against threats from America’s ‘enemies.’”

But “foreign-born Americans were not the only ones at risk,” Weil explained. “When denaturalization became a central part of the government’s national security policy during World War II, the 1940 Nationality Act also expanded the number of American-born citizens subject to automatic loss of citizenship.” Before, only American-born citizens who acquired a foreign citizenship could be subject to denationalization, but the 1940 law “extended the denationalization power to include those Americans who had evaded the draft, joined a foreign army, or participated in foreign elections.”

That’s when “the Supreme Court intervened and began to reduce the scope of the federal government’s denaturalization authority.” Weil writes: “Before the outbreak of war, the Supreme Court had backed the authority of the executive to pursue the denaturalization of new Americans for failing to adhere to a myriad of legal minutiae, from the form of naturalization applications, to the duration of U.S. residence, to the age of their arrival in the United States.” But over the next three decades, it would take up a number of cases relating to denaturalization and denationalization.

“About half of the Court, depending on the particulars of a given case, continued to uphold the authority of Congress to deprive naturalized and native Americans alike of their citizenship. As the basis for its decisions, the Court asserted judicial restraint and the exclusive authority of the elected branches over foreign affairs. The other half of the Court, however, invoked a number of constitutional rights in support of striking down and restricting laws permitting denaturalization and expatriation. Denaturalization had provoked a fierce debate on the Supreme Court between these two factions,” Weil summarizes. “Although intensely divided, the Court progressively reduced the scope of the federal government’s authority to revoke American citizenship. It did so, in part, by upholding free speech and procedural guarantees for foreign-born Americans.”

The most significant ruling came in 1967 when Justice Hugo Black outlined in Afroyim v. Rusk, according to Weil, “an interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment that secured for all—native-born and naturalized—the full set of privileges entailed in American citizenship. American citizenship was no longer a contingent benefit conferred by a sovereign state in exchange for its citizens’ respect for the laws.”

In the ruling, Black wrote: “The very nature of our free government makes it completely incongruous to have a rule of law under which a group of citizens temporarily in office can deprive another group of citizens of their citizenship.”

Although denaturalization was sharply restricted from that point onward, Weil notes that “a nearly unanimous Court permitted—and still permits, in narrow circumstances—a naturalized citizen to lose her American citizenship.”
The limited criteria for denaturalization

There were around 22,000 denaturalizations in the U.S. before 1967, according to Weil. By the time his book was published in 2012, he said there had been only 150 since, though the Department of Justice would later tell news outlets that there were 305 cases between 1990 and 2017.

“Although its use has been substantially reduced,” Weil wrote, “since 1967 denaturalization is still available on two basic grounds. The first of these grounds applies to individuals who have committed gross violations of human rights.” This primarily focused on naturalized Americans with undisclosed Nazi pasts. “In contrast to judicial skepticism of expatriation in the 1960s and 1970s, courts have not challenged the authority of the government to denaturalize individuals responsible for committing human rights violations,” he adds.

“The second modern ground for denaturalization is for fraud or misrepresentation committed during the naturalization process,” Weil writes.

A 2020 advisory by the Immigrant Legal Resource Center explains that “a naturalized U.S. citizen can have that status taken away if the federal government proves by clear, convincing, and unequivocal evidence in a civil federal court proceeding, or satisfies the beyond a reasonable doubt standard in a comparable criminal case, that the citizen was not qualified for naturalization at the time it was mistakenly granted.”

A naturalized citizen can also be denaturalized, the ILRC says, for “refusing under specified circumstances to testify before a congressional committee on alleged subversive activities,” under a Cold War-era law that remains valid, or for failing to meet the requirements if they were naturalized under the wartime-military-service path to citizenship.

While a criminal revocation of naturalization on the basis of naturalization fraud requires, like in all criminal cases, the government to meet a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt burden-of-proof conviction, civil denaturalization proceedings require the government simply to convince a federal court, in which the defendant may not even be provided with an attorney, that a naturalization was “illegally procured” or “procured by concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation.”

Illegal procurement, according to the ILRC, refers to someone who was ineligible for naturalization but received it anyway and doesn’t require proof of concealment or misrepresentation, though the organization notes that it is largely a distinction without a difference as “procuring naturalization by concealment or willful misrepresentation is also procuring it illegally.”

The eligibility conditions that one can be accused of violating include: a) lawful permanent resident status for five years (or three if married to a U.S. citizen); b) continuous residence in the U.S. for that five- or three-year period; c) physical presence in the U.S. for at least half of that five- or three-year period; d) good moral character; and e) that the person was “ “attached to the principles of the Constitution of the United States, and well-disposed to the good order and happiness of the United States” during that five- or three-year period.

The last two conditions are the most broad and open to interpretation. “Many of the cases for denaturalization based on lack of good moral character involve individuals who have committed crimes prior to naturalization, but were not arrested or charged until sometime after naturalization, and they did not disclose the existence of these crimes during the naturalization application process,” the ILRC writes. Similarly, if within five years after naturalization, someone “ joins or becomes affiliated with an organization that would have precluded naturalization,” such as a terrorist group, they can be presumed to have been “not attached to the principles of the Constitution” and “not well disposed to the good order and happiness of the U.S. at the time of naturalization,” and thus denaturalized.


Denaturalization under Trump

Former President Barack Obama ramped up denaturalization efforts with a Department of Homeland Security program called Operation Janus, mined data, including fingerprint records, to identify people who obtained citizenship through false pretenses.

But the first Operation Janus denaturalization didn’t occur until January 2018, when Trump was in office. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services also announced plans around the same time to refer some 1,600 cases to the Justice Department to prosecute, and in its fiscal year 2019 budget, the Department of Homeland Security redirected funds from USCIS to ICE for investigations into naturalized citizens.

Trump’s first-term administration took denaturalization efforts “to new levels,” Cassandra Burke Robertson, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University, wrote in 2019. A factsheet by the Open Justice Initiative said the number of denaturalization cases filed annually under Trump nearly doubled that of Obama.

In 2020, the Justice Department also established in its immigration office a Denaturalization Section “dedicated to investigating and litigating revocation of naturalization,” ostensibly focusing on “terrorists, war criminals, sex offenders, and other fraudsters who illegally obtained naturalization.”

“Despite the significant resources this administration is expending on these cases,” the ILRC noted in its 2020 advisory, “in absolute terms the number of people who have had their citizenship stripped remains small so far. However, there are fears that the creation of the DOJ’s Denaturalization Section may result in many more people being denaturalized in the near future. In addition, these efforts will have a chilling effect on the number of legal permanent residents applying for U.S. citizenship and will further burden a system that is already delayed in adjudicating and granting immigration benefits.”

In 2021, President Joe Biden issued an executive order directing agencies to review denaturalization and passport revocation practices, “to ensure that these authorities are not used excessively or inappropriately.”

But since taking office again, Trump has made denaturalization a priority again.

A June 11 Justice Department memo published online issued guidance to the Civil Division, the largest litigating body of the department, on its priority initiatives, which included the revocation of citizenships.

Assistant Attorney General Brett Shumate, who leads the division, said in the guidance that the division “shall prioritize and maximally pursue denaturalization proceedings in all cases permitted by law and supported by the evidence.”

“The benefits of civil denaturalization,” said Shumate, “include the government’s ability to revoke the citizenship of individuals who engaged in the commission of war crimes, extrajudicial killings, or other serious human rights abuses; to remove naturalized criminals, gang members, or, indeed, any individuals convicted of crimes who pose an ongoing threat to the United States; and to prevent convicted terrorists from returning to U.S. soil or traveling internationally on a U.S. passport.”

Among the cases Shumate ordered prioritizing are cases on those who pose a potential threat to national security, including those with links to terrorism, espionage, or unlawful export from the U.S. of sensitive goods, technology, or information; and those who commit certain kinds of fraud.

The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers criticized how the directive calls for denaturalization via civil proceedings, which the advocacy lamented carry “a lower burden of proof” and “do not require the government to provide the accused with an attorney.” It also criticized the memo’s “broad scope and vague language.”

“The Trump Administration’s push to revoke citizenship is alarming, and raises serious Fourteenth Amendment concerns,” said NACDL President Christopher Wellborn. “The use of civil litigation to evade Sixth Amendment obligations demonstrates contempt for the right to counsel. And although the memo purports to target concealment of earlier offenses, the language suggests that any offense, at any time, may be used to justify denaturalization.”

When it comes to Musk and Mamdani, however, legal experts have said denaturalization proceedings are unlikely. “Denaturalisation is limited to cases where the government can prove material fraud in their original applications,” Michael Kagan, a law professor at the University of Nevada in Las Vegas, told Al Jazeera. Trump’s talk of deporting the two, Kagan says, “appears to be irresponsible rhetoric designed to intimidate political opponents.”

Musk has previously denied accusations of working in the country illegally before he became a citizen.

Mamdani has been accused by members of Congress of sympathizing with terrorists. But while former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who was recently appointed to a Homeland Security advisory council, expressed support for calls to denaturalize and deport him—“I think that is very responsible request and something the government should do given the nature of the things that he says,” Giuliani said last week, calling Mamdani a “traitor”—he caveated: “I don’t know that we can come to the conclusion and convict him of it, but he raises a real legitimate concern that he is not a loyal American.”

As Weil noted in his history of denaturalization, the Supreme Court has affirmed that being “a loyal American” is no longer a condition for U.S. citizenship. But as the history of denaturalization has also shown, the Supreme Court can change its mind. And this Supreme Court has already been observed to show “astounding” deference to Trump.

Still, even if the Trump Administration were to denaturalize Mamdani, which would preclude him from taking office, that wouldn’t necessarily mean it could kick him from the country. Denaturalized citizens do not automatically get deported; rather they are reverted to their last immigration status as a noncitizen—which in Mamdani’s case was a green card holder, or lawful permanent resident.



Anti-Trump Protests Erupt Across United States on Fourth of July: See the Most Dramatic Photos

The country's 249th anniversary was marked by nationwide demonstrations, just weeks after massive "No Kings" protests overshadowed Trump's birthday military parade


Rachel Raposas
Fri, July 4, 2025 
PEOPLE


Stephanie Keith/GettyActivists protest President Donald Trump on July 4, 2025


NEED TO KNOW

Protesters gathered across the United States to rally against President Donald Trump and his administration's policies on Friday, July 4

The demonstrations on the country's 249th birthday came less than one month after massive nationwide "No Kings" protests similarly expressed discontent with the Trump administration

Activists were seen dressed in Marvel costumes, holding hand-painted signs and balloons to demonstrate against the president and his political agenda


Citizens across the United States are marking the country's 249th birthday with protests against the Trump administration.


On Friday, July 4, scores of protesters took to the streets to rally against President Donald Trump's policies established since his return to office in January, including ICE immigration raids and deportation, the bombing of Iranian nuclear sites and overall perceived abuse of federal power.

The timing also aligns with Trump signing his landmark "Big, Beautiful Bill," which includes cuts to popular programs like Medicaid and SNAP and reallocates money for Trump's most controversial programs, including making Immigration and Customs Enforcement better-funded than every other federal law enforcement agency and most countries' entire militaries.

The protests on Independence Day come less than a month after the massive "No Kings" protests held on June 14 — Trump's 79th birthday, during which he hosted a military parade in Washington — that similarly voiced disdain for Trump's policies, especially regarding mass deportation.

See some of the most dramatic photos from the July 4th protests, taken across the nation.

Washington, D.C.




DOMINIC GWINN/Middle East Images/AFP via GettySteve Rogers, a history teacher from Arizona, dresses as Captain America to protest Donald Trump at the White HouseMore
Washington, D.C.



DOMINIC GWINN/Middle East Images/AFP via GettyPeople in Washington, D.C. carry signs protesting President Donald Trump
Los Angeles



ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP via GettyA protestor holds a Trump balloon in Los Angeles
Los Angeles



ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP via GettyProtestors hold signs in Los Angeles on July 4, 2025

Los Angeles

ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP via GettyProtestors dress up in costumes during a Los Angeles protest

Los Angeles



ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP via GettyA protestor carries a sign during a Los Angeles demonstration

New York City




Stephanie Keith/GettyProtestors lay down with signs in New York City

New York City


Stephanie Keith/GettyA protestor holds up signs outside of Trump Tower
New York City


By 

Astronomers using the European Space Agency’s Cheops mission mission have caught an exoplanet that seems to be triggering flares of radiation from the star it orbits. These tremendous explosions are blasting away the planet’s wispy atmosphere, causing it to shrink every year.


This is the first-ever evidence for a ‘planet with a death wish’. Though it was theorised to be possible since the nineties, the flares seen in this research are around 100 times more energetic than expected.

This planet’s star makes our Sun look sleepy

Thanks to telescopes like the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope and NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), we already had some clues about this planet and the star it orbits.

The star, named HIP 67522, was known to be just slightly larger and cooler than our own host star, the Sun. But whilst the Sun is a middle-aged 4.5-billion-year-old, HIP 67522 is a fresh-faced 17-million-year-old. It bears two planets. The closer of the two – given the catchy name HIP 67522 b – takes just seven days to whip around its host star.

Because of its youth and size, scientists suspected that star HIP 67522 would churn and spin with lots of energy. This churning and spinning would turn the star into a powerful magnet.

Our much-older Sun has its own smaller and more peaceful magnetic field. From studying the Sun, we already knew that flares of energy can burst from magnetic stars when ‘twisted’ magnetic field lines are suddenly released. This energy can take the form of anything from gentle radio waves to visible light to aggressive gamma rays.


A la carte research with Cheops

Ever since the first exoplanet was discovered in the 1990s, astronomers have pondered whether some of them might be orbiting close enough to disturb their host stars’ magnetic fields. If so, they could be triggering flares.

A team led by Ekaterina Ilin at the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy (ASTRON) figured that with our current space telescopes, it was time to investigate this question further.

“We hadn’t seen any systems like HIP 67522 before; when the planet was found it was the youngest planet known to be orbiting its host star in less than 10 days,” says Ekaterina.

The team was using TESS to do a broad sweep of stars that might be flaring because of an interaction with their planets. When TESS turned its eyes to HIP 67522, the team thought they could be on to something. To be sure, they called upon ESA’s sensitive CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite, Cheops.

“We quickly requested observing time with Cheops, which can target individual stars on demand, ultra precisely,” says Ekaterina. “With Cheops we saw more flares, taking the total count to 15, almost all coming in our direction as the planet transited in front of the star as seen from Earth.”

Because we are seeing the flares as the planet passes in front of the star, it is very likely that they are being triggered by the planet.

A flaring star is nothing new. Our own Sun regularly releases bursts of energy, which we experience on Earth as ‘space weather’ that causes the auroras and can damage technology. But we’ve only ever seen this energy exchange as a one-way street from star to planet.

Knowing that HIP 67522 b orbits extremely close to its host star, and assuming that the star’s magnetic field is strong, Ekaterina’s team deduced that the clingy HIP 67522 b sits close enough to exert its own magnetic influence on its host star.

They think that the planet gathers energy as it orbits, then redirects that energy as waves along the star’s magnetic field lines, as if whipping a rope. When the wave meets the end of the magnetic field line at the star’s surface, it triggers a massive flare.

It’s the first time we see a planet influencing its host star, overturning our previous assumption that stars behave independently.

And not only is HIP 67522 b triggering flares, but it is also triggering them in its own direction. As a result, the planet experiences six times more radiation than it otherwise would.

A self-imposed downfall

Unsurprisingly, being bombarded with so much high-energy radiation does not bode well for HIP 67522 b. The planet is similar in size to Jupiter but has the density of candy floss, making it one of the wispiest exoplanets ever found.

Over time, the radiation is eroding away the planet’s feathery atmosphere, meaning it is losing mass much faster than expected. In the next 100 million years, it could go from an almost Jupiter-sized planet to a much smaller Neptune-sized planet.

“The planet seems to be triggering particularly energetic flares,” points out Ekaterina. “The waves it sends along the star’s magnetic field lines kick off flares at specific moments. But the energy of the flares is much higher than the energy of the waves. We think that the waves are setting off explosions that are waiting to happen.”

More questions than answers

When HIP 67522 was found, it was the youngest known planet orbiting so close to its host star. Since then, astronomers have spotted a couple of similar systems and there are probably dozens more in the nearby Universe. Ekaterina and her team are keen to take a closer look at these unique systems with TESS, Cheops and other exoplanet missions.

“I have a million questions because this is a completely new phenomenon, so the details are still not clear,” she says.

“There are two things that I think are most important to do now. The first is to follow up in different wavelengths (Cheops covers visible to near-infrared wavelengths) to find out what kind of energy is being released in these flares – for example ultraviolet and X-rays are especially bad news for the exoplanet.

“The second is to find and study other similar star-planet systems; by moving from a single case to a group of 10–100 systems, theoretical astronomers will have something to work with.”

Maximillian Günther, Cheops project scientist at ESA, is excited to see the mission contributing to research in a way that he never thought possible: “Cheops was designed to characterise the sizes and atmospheres of exoplanets, not to look for flares. It’s really beautiful to see the mission contributing to this and other results that go so far beyond what it was envisioned to do.”

Looking further ahead, ESA’s future exoplanet hunter Plato will also study Sun-like stars like HIP 67522. Plato will be able to capture much smaller flares to really give us the detail that we need to better understand what is going on.

Washington Post Slams Tulsi Gabbard’s ‘Fundamental Misunderstanding’ of How Media Works

William Vaillancourt
Thu, July 3, 2025
DAILY BEAST


Kevin Lamarque / REUTERS

The Washington Post rejected an “unfounded” claim by Tulsi Gabbard that one of the paper’s reporters was “harassing” the Director of National Intelligence’s staffers.

Gabbard had posted earlier Thursday on X that national security reporter Ellen Nakashima “appears to be actively harassing ODNI staff.” Gabbard added: ”Instead of reaching out to my press office, she is calling high-level Intelligence Officers from a burner phone, refusing to identify herself, lying about the fact that she works for the Washington Post, and then demanding they share sensitive information."

Gabbard insisted that what was happening was “a clear political op by the same outlet and the same reporter who harassed and stalked my family in Hawaii.”

The Post’s executive editor, Matt Murray, dismissed Gabbard’s allegations.



“Reaching out to potential sources rather than relying solely on official government press statements regarding matters of public interest is neither nefarious nor is it harassment. It is basic journalism,” Murray explained.



Gabbard didn't understand that what

“DNI Gabbard’s unfounded personal attack reflects a fundamental misunderstanding about the role of journalists to report on government officials and hold power to account, without fear or favor and regardless of party,” he continued. “The Post remains committed to that vital and constitutionally protected work.”

Gabbard’s post hinted at the potential nature of Nakashima’s inquiries.

“Apparently, publishing leaked classified material wasn’t enough for the Washington Post, so now they’ve decided to go after the Intelligence professionals charged to protect it,” Gabbard wrote, an apparent reference to the paper’s coverage of an early Pentagon assessment of damage to Iranian nuclear sites.

Reporting on that subject by other outlets like CNN and The New York Times drew furious complaints from many in the Trump administration, with the president baselessly threatening prosecution. Each outlet firmly supported its reporting and defended its legality.

Attacks on the press through lawsuits and the threat of them since Trump returned to The White House have been rampant.

Even the conservative-leaning Wall Street Journal editorial board condemned Trump for them, writing Wednesday—after Paramount agreed to a $16 million settlement with Trump over what many experts dubbed a meritless lawsuit—that “using the government to intimidate news outlets that publish stories he doesn’t like” was a “low move.”

Top US intelligence official criticizes Washington Post reporter

Reuters
Thu, July 3, 2025 



Newspaper banner logo is seen during grand opening of Washington Post in Washington

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The top U.S. intelligence officer on Thursday leveled an unusual attack on a journalist, accusing a Washington Post reporter of "actively harassing" her staff in a social media post that also accused the media of seeking to undermine President Donald Trump's agenda.

In a post on X, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard criticized journalist Ellen Nakashima's reporting methods, saying they reflected a media establishment "desperate to sabotage POTUS's successful agenda," referring to the president of the United States.

In response, Washington Post Executive Editor Matt Murray said Nakashima has been "one of the most careful, fair-minded, and highly regarded reporters covering national security."

In a statement, he said Gabbard's attack reflected a misunderstanding about journalism. "Reaching out to potential sources rather than relying solely on official government press statements regarding matters of public interest is neither nefarious nor is it harassment," Murray said.

Public criticism of individual journalists by top U.S. national security officials is historically rare. But Trump has made attacks on the media a staple of his speeches and administration officials are increasingly adopting his approach to critical press coverage.

At a news conference last month, Trump's defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, also criticized the media, without evidence, for having anti-Trump bias. Hegseth's comments came at a briefing where he accused journalists of downplaying the success of strikes on Iran following a leaked preliminary assessment from the Defense Intelligence Agency suggesting they may have only set back Iran by months.

Trump also recently demanded that CNN fire national security correspondent Natasha Bertrand for reporting about the Defense Intelligence Agency assessment.

CNN responded that it stood "100% behind" Bertrand's journalism.

GOOD NEWS

Honduran family freed from detention after lawsuit against ICE courthouse arrests


JIM VERTUNO
Thu, July 3, 2025 


Immigration advocates protest recent detentions by ICE outside the immigration court in San Antonio, Texas, Tuesday, July 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)


AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A mother and her two young children from Honduras who had filed what was believed to be the first lawsuit involving children challenging the Trump administration's policy on immigrant arrests at courthouses have been released from detention, civil rights groups and attorneys for the family said Thursday.

The lawsuit filed on behalf of the mother identified as “Ms. Z,” her 6-year-old son and her 9-year-old daughter, said they were arrested outside the courtroom after an immigration court hearing in Los Angeles. They had been held for weeks in the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in Texas. Their identities have not been released because of concerns for their safety.

The lawsuit said that the family entered the U.S. legally using a Biden-era appointment app and that their arrest violated their Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizure and their Fifth Amendment right to due process.

The family's lawyers said the boy had also recently undergone chemotherapy treatment for leukemia and his mother feared his health was declining while in detention.

The family was released late Wednesday while their lawsuit was still pending, and they went to a shelter in South Texas before they plan to return to their lives in the Los Angeles area, said Columbia Law School professor Elora Mukherjee, one of the lawyers representing the family.

“They will go back to their lives, to church, and school, and the family will continue to pursue their asylum case. And hopefully the little boy will get the medical attention he needs,” Mukherjee said. “They never should have been arrested and detained in the first place. We are grateful they have been released.”

Department of Homeland Security officials did not immediately respond to an email request for comment. Last week, the agency posted on social media that the boy “has been seen regularly by medical personnel since arriving at the Dilley facility.”

Starting in May, the country has seen large-scale arrests in which asylum-seekers appearing at routine hearings have been arrested outside courtrooms as part of the White House’s mass deportation effort. In many cases, a judge will grant a government lawyer’s request to dismiss deportation proceedings and then U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers will arrest the person and place them on “expedited removal,” a fast track to deportation.

Lawyers for the “Z” family said their lawsuit was the first one filed on behalf of children to challenge the ICE courthouse arrest policy.

There have been other similar lawsuits, including in New York, where a federal judge ruled last month that federal immigration authorities can’t make civil arrests at the state’s courthouses or arrest anyone going there for a proceeding.

“The Z family’s release demonstrates the power we have when we fight back against harmful, un-American policies," said Kate Gibson Kumar, staff attorney for the Beyond Borders Program of the Texas Civil Rights Project.

The family’s lawyers have said that during their hearing before a judge, the mother said they wished to continue their cases for asylum. Homeland Security moved to dismiss their cases, and the judge immediately granted that motion.



ICE’s $175 billion windfall: Trump’s mass deportation force set to receive military-level funding
Salon

When they stepped out of the courtroom, they found men in civilian clothing believed to be ICE agents who arrested the family, Mukherjee said. They spent about 11 hours at an immigrant processing center in Los Angeles and were each only given an apple, a small packet of cookies, a juice box and water.

At one point, an officer near the boy lifted his shirt, revealing his gun. The boy urinated on himself and was left in wet clothing until the next morning, Mukherjee said.



Honduran family, 6-year-old with leukemia released from ICE detention

Eduardo Cuevas, 
USA TODAY
Thu, July 3, 2025 

A 6-year-old Honduran boy with leukemia who had been held in immigration detention with his family since May was released July 2.

The boy, his mother and 9-year-old sister entered the country legally last fall seeking asylum. Federal agents arrested them as they left an immigration hearing in Los Angeles on May 29. They were held in a privately run family detention center in South Texas. Their release was made public July 3, but their future remains unclear.

Lawyers for the family sued for their release, arguing their detention violated their constitutional rights of due process and unreasonable seizure. The lawyers feared that, since leukemia in children requires consistent treatment, the boy’s care would be disrupted if they were deported to Honduras or detained for too long.
Migrants who followed Biden's rules no longer welcome, Trump says

The family's situation is similar to many immigrants who arrived during the Biden administration, following the rules at the time and not violating any laws. Recently, though, the Trump administration has decided that most of them should not be in the United States, and has been detaining a growing number of migrants as they show up to mandatory court hearings.

“Can ICE snatch law-abiding people out of their communities at courthouses when those individuals are doing exactly what the government required of them?” said Elora Mukherjee, a lawyer for the family and director of the Columbia Law School Immigrants’ Rights Clinic.


U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents look over lists of names and their hearing times and locations inside the Federal Plaza courthouse before making arrests on June 27, 2025, in New York.More

Neither Immigration and Customs Enforcement nor the Department of Homeland Security immediately responded to an emailed request for comment.

The family entered the United States in October through the CBP One App, which allowed migrants to apply for asylum screening interviews at the border, according to court filings. President Donald Trump's administration repurposed the app for migrants to leave the country.

A DHS spokesperson said in a June 28 statement that most migrants who entered the country within the last two years, while Joe Biden was president, are subject to expedited removal.
Cancer diagnosis and danger back home

The family drew national media attention, especially given the child’s cancer, which lawyers say still requires treatment. Their names haven't been released due to threats they face in Honduras.

The boy, diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia at age 3, had most recently been undergoing two-and-a-half years of chemotherapy. He has about half a year of treatment left.

The family was released along the U.S.-Mexico border, hours from where they were held near San Antonio, at the South Texas Family Residential Center, according to a spokesperson for the Texas Civil Rights Project, a legal advocacy organization representing the family in court.

As of July 3, they were staying in a shelter awaiting a way to return to Los Angeles, where they were living with a relative before their arrest. The family is also seeking to get the boy medical care, Mukherjee said.




Dutch intelligence services say Russia has stepped up use of banned chemical weapons in Ukraine

MOLLY QUELL
Fri, July 4, 2025 


FILE - A chemical lab is on display during a briefing by Russian Foreign and Defense Ministries in Kubinka Patriot park outside Moscow, Russia, Friday, June 22, 2018. (AP Photo, File)

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Two Dutch intelligence agencies said on Friday that Russia is increasing its use of prohibited chemical weapons in Ukraine, including the World War I-era poison gas chloropicrin.

The Netherlands’ military intelligence and the security service, together with the German intelligence service, found that the use of prohibited chemical weapons by the Russian military had become “standardized and commonplace” in Ukraine.

According to the findings, the Russian military uses chloropicrin and riot control agent CS against sheltering Ukrainian soldiers, who are then forced out into the open and shot.

Dutch Defense Minister Ruben Brekelmans called for more sanctions against Moscow, and continued military support for Kyiv.

Brekelmans, who stayed on in a caretaker role after the Dutch government collapsed last month, said that he doesn't want to see the use of chemical weapons become normalized.

Lowering the threshold for use “is not only dangerous for Ukraine, but also for the rest of Europe and the world,” he said in a statement.

Russia has signed up to the Chemical Weapons Convention, which bans the use of chloropicrin and CS as weapons. The convention’s watchdog, The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, or OPCW, has found several incidents in Ukraine involving CS, but the group hasn't conducted a full investigation, which must be requested by the member states.

The executive committee for the OPCW is holding a regular meeting next week, where it's expected to discuss the conflict in Ukraine.

Russian authorities didn't immediately comment on the findings, but they have denied using chemical weapons in the past, instead alleging that Ukraine has used the banned substances.

According to Ukraine, Russia has carried out 9,000 chemical weapons attacks in the country since the start of the full-scale invasion in 2022.

In 2024, the U.S. State Department said that it had recorded the use of chloropicrin against Ukrainian troops.

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Follow the AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Russian use of chemical weapons against Ukraine 'widespread', Dutch defence minister says

Anthony Deutsch
Fri, July 4, 2025
REUTERS


FILE PHOTO: Servicemen fire a howitzer towards Russian troops at a position in a front line in Donetsk region

FILE PHOTO: Ukraine builds barricades, digs trenches as focus shifts to defence

FILE PHOTO: Infantry soldier Viktor of Ukraine's 58th Motorized Brigade scans the sky for enemy drones as he stands in a frontline trench in the Donetsk region

THE HAGUE (Reuters) - Dutch and German intelligence agencies have gathered evidence of widespread Russian use of banned chemical weapons in Ukraine, including dropping a choking agent from drones to drive soldiers out of trenches so they can be shot, they said on Friday.

Dutch Defence Minister Ruben Brekelmans called for tougher sanctions against Moscow.

"The main conclusion is that we can confirm Russia is intensifying its use of chemical weapons," he told Reuters.

"This intensification is concerning because it is part of a trend we have been observing for several years now, where Russia's use of chemical weapons in this war is becoming more normalized, standardized, and widespread."

Germany's BND foreign intelligence agency confirmed the findings, saying in a statement that it had obtained the evidence alongside its Dutch counterparts. Reuters was first to report on the intelligence.

The head of the Dutch Military Intelligence Agency (MIVD), Peter Reesink, said the conclusions followed "our own independent intelligence, so we have observed it ourselves based on our own investigations."

Reuters has not been able to independently verify the use of banned chemical substances by either side in the Ukraine war.

The United States first accused Russia of using chloropicrin, a chemical compound more toxic than riot control agents and first used by Germany during World War One, in May last year.

Ukraine alleges thousands of instances of Russian chemical weapons use.

Russia's defence ministry did not immediately respond to a request to comment for this article. Russia has denied using illegal munitions and it has accused Ukraine of doing so.

Maria Zakharova, spokeswoman for the Russian foreign ministry, said on Wednesday that the Federal Security Service discovered a Ukrainian cache of explosive devices in the east of the country containing chloropicrin.

Ukraine has consistently denied such accusations.

The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), a disarmament agency in The Hague with 193 member states, said last year that initial accusations levelled by both countries at each other were "insufficiently substantiated".

It has not been asked to conduct a full investigation, which must be initiated by member states.

At least three Ukrainian deaths have been tied to chemical weapons use, Brekelmans said, while more than 2,500 people injured on the battlefield reported chemical weapons-related symptoms to Ukrainian health authorities.

Increased use of chemical weapons by Russia poses a threat not only to Ukraine but to other countries, Brekelmans added.

"We must further increase the pressure. This means looking at more sanctions and specifically not allowing them (Russia) to participate in international bodies like the Executive Council of the OPCW," he said.

Reesink spoke of "thousands of instances" of chemical weapons use, while also citing a Ukrainian figure of 9,000.

Rotating two-year seats on the OPCW council will be up for negotiation in the coming months.

The intelligence findings were presented in a letter to the Dutch parliament on Friday.


LARGE-SCALE PROGRAM

Russia is a member of the OPCW and, like the United States, has destroyed its declared chemical weapons stockpiles.

Increased sanctions could happen in conjunction with the European Commission, which has proposed listing 15 additional new entities and individuals to its sanctions framework, including for suspected use of chemical weapons in Ukraine.

The Dutch military and general intelligence agencies, working with foreign partners, say they have uncovered concrete evidence of intensified Russian chemical weapons production.

This includes heightened research capabilities and the recruitment of scientists for chemical weapons development, Reesink said. He added that Russian officials have given instructions to soldiers on the use of poisonous warfare agents.

"This isn't just some ad-hoc tinkering at the frontline; it is truly part of a large-scale program. And that is, of course, also concerning because if we don't clarify and publicize what Russia is doing, it's highly likely these trends will continue," Reesink said.

He called the use of chemical weapons by Russian armed forces "almost standing operating procedure."

"We specifically linked the use of chloropicrin to improvised munitions, such as filled light bulbs and empty bottles that are hung from a drone. When it comes to teargas, we see that they are also misusing and converting existing munitions to act as the carrier for the gas," he said.

Chloropicrin is listed as a banned choking agent by OPCW, which was created to implement and monitor compliance with the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC).

It can cause severe irritation to the skin, eyes, and respiratory tract. If ingested, it can cause burns in the mouth and stomach, nausea and vomiting, as well as difficulty breathing or shortness of breath.