update - USSC strikes down CO's conversion therapy ban 8 - 1

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
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More than 20 states sue Trump over new across-the-board tariffs


New York Attorney General Letitia James and more than 20 other states are suing President Donald Trump to block newly imposed global tariffs after the Supreme Court struck down his sweeping tariff agenda last month.

Trump unlawfully imposed tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, according to the Supreme Court. After that decision, the president swiftly raised worldwide tariffs to 15 percent “effective immediately,” citing Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974.



A coalition of Democratic states argue in the new suit that the president’s use of that law is similarly illegal.

“Once again, President Trump is ignoring the law and the Constitution to effectively raise taxes on consumers and small businesses,” James said in a statement Thursday.

“After the Supreme Court rejected his first attempt to impose sweeping tariffs, the president is causing more economic chaos and expecting Americans to foot the bill,” she added. “These tariffs will only drive up the cost of living, and I will continue to uphold the rule of law to protect New Yorkers.”

The suit was filed in the U.S. International Court of Trade in Manhattan.

Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act gives the president the power to impose temporary tariffs of up to 15 percent for a maximum of 150 days to address serious “balance-of-payments deficits” or to prevent the “significant depreciation of the dollar” abroad.



James and the coalition of Democratic states say that the president is misusing this statute to bring tariffs. They argue it was created to address specific currency crises that would arise before the end of the gold-standard fixed-rate currency exchange system in 1976.

“Section 122 does not grant the President authority to impose tariffs based on a trade deficit,” the lawsuit says.



A coalition of Democratic state attorneys general filed a lawsuit March 5 in response to Trump’s revived tariff agenda after the Supreme Court struck down his sweeping levies (Getty)
Trump is the first president ever to invoke Section 122.

James — who led a massive fraud investigation into Trump’s real-estate empire — has joined more than three dozen lawsuits against the Trump administration since the president returned to the White House.

In turn, Trump has repeatedly pushed for criminal investigations into the state attorney general, none of which have landed.

Speaking from the White House briefing room after the Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision, Trump raged against what he called a “deeply disappointing” ruling and said he was “absolutely ashamed” of two conservative justices he appointed who sided with the court’s majority.



James has led several large lawsuits against the Trump administration since the president returned to the White House last year (AP)
“They’re against anything that makes America strong, healthy and great again. They are also frankly a disgrace to our nation, those justices,” Trump said. “They’re very unpatriotic and disloyal to our Constitution.”

That night, he said he was imposing a 10 percent tariff on all trading partners. Less than 24 hours later, he bumped up that rate to 15 percent “based on a thorough, detailed, and complete review of the ridiculous, poorly written, and extraordinarily anti-American decision,” he wrote on Truth Social.



The Supreme Court was asked to determine whether Trump illegally imposed sweeping tariffs on nearly every trading partner under the 1977 law, which permits the president to regulate trade during “unusual and extraordinary” circumstances when a national emergency is declared.

Trump invoked the law when he imposed a baseline 10 percent tariff on most countries, in addition to heavier “reciprocal tariffs” that he announced last April on his so-called “Liberation Day.” The president argued the tariffs were a matter of national security to balance trade deficits.

The tariffs — a key tool in the president’s economic agenda — sparked global chaos and several lawsuits from small businesses. Trump, using tariffs as leverage to extract “deals” with other countries, repeatedly walked back his levies and markets gradually rebounded.

Hundreds of business owners across the country who were forced to absorb the cost of Trump’s tariffs and then pass costs to consumers through higher prices have filed complaints seeking reimbursements.


Approximately 1,000 complaints have been filed with the Court of International Trade in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s ruling.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
ICE closing massive detention center Trump admin eyed as model after migrants die: report


U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement appears poised to shutter a troubled $1.2 billion tent detention facility near El Paso, Texas, that opened just eight months ago, according to internal documents reviewed by The Washington Post.

An ICE memo circulating among staff this week indicated the agency is drafting a termination letter for the sprawling Camp East Montana, operated by Acquisition Logistics LLC.


The facility, once touted as a model for rapid detention expansion, has become a cautionary tale of mismanagement and chaos.

"Once seen as the model for a new breed of makeshift tent encampments the Trump administration planned to rapidly build all over the country in its campaign to detain and deport millions of immigrants, Camp East Montana struggled to provide safe and humane housing for thousands of people," the report said.


Three detainees died there in two months, including a Cuban national whose January death was ruled a homicide. Witnesses claim guards choked Campos during a struggle, though Department of Homeland Security officials dispute the account.

ICE's own inspectors found at least 60 federal standard violations in September, citing failures in medical care, legal access, and safety procedures. Detainees housed in enormous football-field-sized tents alleged beatings by guards and denied medical treatment. A measles outbreak recently forced the facility to close to visitors and attorneys.



The facility houses approximately 1,500 detainees, which is half its January peak, in open-top tent pods holding up to 72 people each. Though designed as temporary two-week holding centers, records show many detainees have been confined for months.

Rep. Veronica Escobar called for its closure, arguing the money could fund healthcare and social programs instead of "dehumanizing" immigrants. DHS spokeswoman Lauren Bis insisted "no decisions have been made," though internal memos suggest otherwise. The closure comes as DHS pursues a separate $38 billion warehouse detention expansion plan.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
Pam Bondi's gambit to shield prosecutors from ethics probes is illegal: experts


Under Attorney General Pam Bondi, the "sloppy and dishonest" Justice Department has proposed a new rule that would effectively block state bars from investigating federal prosecutors they license to practice in their state — but there's already a massive flaw in the plan that will make it nearly impossible to enforce, legal analyst Mark Joseph Stern wrote for Slate on Friday.



"Under this rule ... Bondi could freeze state bars’ probes until the department has undertaken its own independent review of any allegations — a black-box process that could stretch on extensively," said the report. "Wielding this new power, Bondi could essentially quash any state investigations into ethics violations by DOJ lawyers, including accusations that these front-line attorneys lied in court, by allowing 'reviews' that might last indefinitely."


Where this runs into problems, Stern said on a podcast with fellow legal analyst Dahlia Lithwick, is they won't be able to get courts to actually pause state bar investigations in accordance with this rule.


"The proposal itself is extremely ambiguous as to how, exactly, the DOJ would actually suspend state bar investigations," said Stern. "It just says that the department shall 'take appropriate action to prevent the bar disciplinary authorities from interfering with the Attorney General’s review of the allegations.' That almost certainly means going to federal court to get an injunction against the state bar’s investigation."



But the Supreme Court has already prohibited lower courts from doing this, he continued: "In a case called Middlesex County Ethics Committee v. Garden State Bar Association, the court unanimously ruled that federal courts must avoid interfering with legitimate and ongoing state bar disciplinary proceedings, because states have 'an extremely important interest in maintaining and assuring the professional conduct of the attorneys it licenses.'"

This comes as a huge litany of federal prosecutors working for the DOJ have been accused of serious professional misconduct, and as federal judges have accused them of outright lying to them in court.

It also comes as Lindsey Halligan, the prosecutor who unsuccessfully tried to indict former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James before being disqualified from office, was reportedly the subject of a complaint to the Florida State Bar, although they have since clarified previous reports they opened an investigation into Halligan were incorrect.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
Judge deals severe blow to Trump admin’s ploy to force through deportations


The Trump administration was dealt a major blow Monday after a federal judge blocked an effort to severely limit appeals to immigration judges’ decisions, including deportations, marking just the latest setback in President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda.

The Trump administration issued a rule in early February designed to “streamline administrative appellate review by the Board of Immigration Appeals,” a rule that would have made appealing an immigration judge’s ruling far more difficult.



In his ruling on Monday, however, U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss blocked the Trump administration’s implementation of the new rule, writing in his decision that the change represented “an unconsidered and unlawful effort to erode the fundamental fairness of immigration removal proceedings, posing extraordinary (and at times insurmountable) barriers to their organizational missions and ability to represent their clients.”

Trump’s immigration policy has dragged down the Republican Party’s favorability as the 2026 midterm elections approach, particularly on the issue of immigration, once among his strongest performing issues.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
Trump pardon lawyer faces ethics charges over threat against law school


A lawyer serving as President Donald Trump's pardon attorney for the Justice Department has been formally accused of misconduct.

The District of Columbia Bar filed ethics charges against DOJ pardon attorney Ed Martin over a threatening letter he sent last year, when he was serving as interim U.S. attorney, to the Georgetown University Law Center questioning its diversity and inclusion policies, reported CBS News.


The investigation could end with his being stripped of his law license.

"Acting in his official capacity and speaking on behalf of the government, he used coercion to punish or suppress a disfavored viewpoint, the teaching and promotion of DEI," the court filing says. "He demanded that Georgetown Law relinquish its free speech and religious rights in order to obtain a benefit, employment opportunities for its students."


Martin's letter informed university officials that a whistleblower claimed Georgetown was teaching DEI and asked officials about the claim, but before they responded he notified the school that his office would no longer employ any Georgetown students as fellows, interns or employees.


Those actions violated the First and Fifth Amendments by making demands on how and what the law school teaches, according to D.C. Disciplinary Counsel Hamilton "Phil" Fox, but the DOJ accused the bar of being a partisan organization.

"The DC bar's attempt to target and punish those serving President Trump while refusing to investigate or act against actual ethical violations that were committed by Biden and Obama administration attorneys is a clear indication of this partisan organization's agenda," the DOJ said in a statement.

Martin, who had been a lawyer for numerous Jan. 6 rioters, was reassigned to head the DOJ's so-called weaponization working group after it became clear he would not be confirmed as U.S. attorney, but he has since been stripped of those duties as well and remains on staff as the DOJ pardon attorney.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
Trump to bankrupt red state prosecutor with 'preposterous' legal fees


President Donald Trump has a history of trying to use the White House as a battering ram to demand exorbitant legal fees from offices that have investigated him. And a Georgia judge’s decision now allows Trump to shake the Fulton County Georgia’s DA down with bankruptcy-inducing fees, the Atlanta Journal Constitution reports.



“The Atlanta judge overseeing the scuttled 2020 election interference case against President Donald Trump and others has barred Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from fighting their request for almost $17 million in defense costs,” reports AJC.

A new law, passed by Georgia’ majority-Republican legislature, gives Trump and his cohorts an opening to recoup expenditures from cases where the lead prosecutor has been disqualified. And when Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee denied Willis’ request to be allowed back into the case to defend her office against the defendants’ unfettered invoices from Trump and his co-defendants.

Trump, by himself, is seeking more than $6.2 million in attorney fees and litigation costs tied to his defense in the election interference case.

The DA called the defendants’ combined request for nearly $17 million a “suitably preposterous sum for a surreal and unprecedented legal proceeding,” which she believes could have been prosecuted to conviction had Trump not won the 2024 election.


“The District Attorney has no intention of allowing Fulton County taxpayers to pay such an absurd amount for such an absurd reason,” Willis added, complaining that the former chief of staff’s lawyers “have essentially said ‘just trust us’ and asked this court to ignore its duty to assess reasonable fees.”

Trump’s attorney Jennifer Little, for example, is billing Georgia for “$1,000-a-night luxury hotels in Florida, after Willis herself was criticized for staying at a Doubletree,” reports AJC.

Additionally, one defendant billed $820 to prepare a cover letter and drop it off at the Fulton County courthouse. Another asked for $2,000 for delivering “a blank hard drive” to co-counsel in Atlanta, according to the filing.

And some of the expenses filed were duplicative, said Willis.

“John Eastman, a now-disbarred lawyer who led efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia and elsewhere, sought compensation for a $100,000 retainer for his defense attorney in the prosecution,” reports AJC. “But he also sought expenses that were charged against that retainer, essentially double-dipping for the same costs.”


Additionally, Willis argued that when Georgia Republican legislators passed the new law allowing Trump and his friends to demand fees, they did not apply the law to all prosecuting attorneys in the state, making the new law is unconstitutional.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
Trump DOJ lawsuit demanding blue State's voter data could fizzle out after mistake


A basic legal error could tank the Justice Department's lawsuit seeking to force Washington State to hand over its confidential voter registration data.

In a court order flagged by the liberal outlet Democracy Docket, U.S. Magistrate Judge S. Kate Vaughan alerted the Justice Department that they never provided any proof that the state of Washington was properly served with their lawsuit — an oversight that would be grounds for throwing the whole case out.


"Plaintiff shall file proof of timely service upon Defendant or show cause as to why this matter should not be dismissed by March 17, 2026," wrote Vaughan in the two-page order.

This lawsuit is one of several filed around the country against states that have refused to render sensitive voter roll information that includes Social Security Numbers and other identifying information — mostly Democratic states, but also a handful of Republican ones.

All of this comes as Trump still aggressively pushes for the Republican Senate to pass his SAVE America Act, a massive crackdown on voting rights that would, among other things, require every current voter to re-register under new documentation requirements, and run those voter rolls through a Department of Homeland Security screening system notorious for errors.

Republicans don't appear to have the votes to pass it; however, under pressure, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) has moved for a vote on it next week anyway.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
Judge refuses to save disqualified Trump prosecutor's revenge case


A disqualified federal prosecutor working in Donald Trump's Justice Department got bad news on Wednesday, as a federal judge refused to block a ruling that stops him from pursuing an investigation into New York Attorney General Letitia James.

"Another defeat for another unconstitutionally appointed Trump DOJ prosecutor: Ex-Trump campaign lawyer John Sarcone will remain disqualified as U.S. Attorney for Albany, and his subpoenas to Letitia James' office will stay quashed," reported All Rise News' Adam Klasfeld on X. "He's not likely to succeed on appeal, a judge finds."



In the ruling, U.S. District Judge Lorna G. Schofield concluded, "The Federal Government has not demonstrated a strong likelihood of success on the merits or 'serious legal questions' coupled with a balance of hardships tipping decidedly in its favor. Any harm from the investigation-specific disqualification is abstract at best, whereas granting a stay would reinstate an official who acted without lawful authority — a clear injury to the State Government. The public interest likewise favors ensuring that governmental power is exercised only by officials with lawful authority. Each factor, and all four taken together, weigh against granting a stay."

Sarcone, who was heading up a U.S. attorney's office that covers most of Upstate New York, had been investigating the legitimacy of James' lawsuits against President Donald Trump and the National Rifle Association.


However, his appointment was ruled unlawful because he was not seated in that role using the proper procedure — an issue that has also gotten several other Trump-backed prosecutors disqualified, including Bill Essayli in California, Sigal Chattah in Nevada, Alina Habba in New Jersey, and Lindsey Halligan in Virginia.

Halligan had herself been prosecuting James, under a thinly-supported allegation that she had committed mortgage fraud by mislabeling the use of one of her properties to a credit union. Experts widely regarded this prosecution as politically motivated, as Trump has long been furious at James for launching a series of investigations into his finances.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
DHS aide reportedly bragged he was untouchable before ouster: 'I do whatever I want'


Corey Lewandowski, the powerful aide at the center of a Homeland Security scandal embroiling Kristi Noem, believes he can operate without consequences because President Donald Trump will pardon him, according to a new report.

"I'm not worried. I do whatever the f--- I want. DJT will pardon me," Lewandowski told insiders last year, according to multiple New York Post sources familiar with his remarks.


Another source confirmed Lewandowski "was telling people he was going to get [a] pardon so he didn’t have to worry."

A former Trump campaign adviser told the Post, “Corey has always behaved like the rules don’t apply to him. People around Trumpworld have been waiting to see how that ends."


The aide said that he doubted Trump would grant clemency “absent a witch hunt” if Lewandowski was found to have abused his position for personal gain.

Lewandowski flatly denied the reporting, telling The Post: "Never said that. Never asked for a pardon and have no reason to receive one."

The alleged pardon boast offers a window into how Lewandowski operated at DHS alongside Secretary Kristi Noem, his alleged romantic partner. He controlled operations, approved major contracts, and fired staff on a whim.


Trump's fired Noem last week following congressional hearings where she faced questions about a $220 million federal advertising campaign and her personal relationship with Lewandowski. Trump's "final straw" was her evasive response when asked about "sexual relations" with Lewandowski.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
90,191
145,947
113
Epstein supplied Mandelson with illegal drugs and Botox while he was in government


Jeffrey Epstein illegally supplied Peter Mandelson with drugs while he was a government minister, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

Bombshell emails also expose how the paedophile financier arranged for the Labour peer to have cosmetic Botox injections while he visited him in New York.


The astonishing exchanges came while Epstein was under house arrest after his conviction for soliciting sex from a 14-year-old girl. And in the most shocking message, Mandelson tells the sex offender that drugs thought to be Xanax sedatives are 'all very well but you need someone to use them on…'

Epstein is known to have got his victims – including Virginia Giuffre – hooked on Xanax to make them dependent upon him, and more pliant. It is a controlled drug in both the US and the UK, meaning it is illegal to possess it without prescription. The NHS does not prescribe it due to high risks of addiction.

Yet in one email Mandelson boldly asks Epstein where he will get more 'triangles'.

Xanax pills come in different shapes depending on their dosage, with the most potent being green and triangular.

The tranche of damning emails unearthed in the Epstein Files show that Mandelson was so close to the sex offender that he repeatedly asked for medical advice and medication.


They will heap further pressure on Sir Keir Starmer over his decision to appoint Mandelson as US ambassador, despite his known ties to the paedophile. Last week, it was revealed the Prime Minister was warned in writing that Mandelson continued his 'particularly close' friendship with Epstein for years after his sex offence convictions in 2008.


Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Peter Mandelson pictured wearing bathrobes while sat with Jeffrey Epstein

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Peter Mandelson pictured wearing bathrobes while sat with Jeffrey Epstein

A graphic showing an email exchange between Mandelson and Epstein, in which the former appears to asks for medical advice regarding Botox

A graphic showing an email exchange between Mandelson and Epstein, in which the former appears to asks for medical advice regarding Botox

ADDICTIVE PILLS KEPT EPSTEIN'S GIRLS 'MALLEABLE'

Virginia Giuffre became hooked on Xanax supplied by Jeffrey Epstein's network of doctors while she was being trafficked by the paedophile.
Ms Giuffre bravely wrote in her posthumously published memoir about how she became dependent on the addictive and powerful tranquilliser to cope with the ongoing abuse.


She said: 'I was turning more and more to Xanax and other drugs, which were prescribed by doctors [Ghislaine] Maxwell sent me to. Sometimes, when I was really struggling, I took as many as eight Xanax a day.'
Other victims also reported being supplied with the drug.
A 2011 email from the Epstein Files released by the US Department of Justice shows an attorney recording how a victim had 'reported that Epstein gave her Xanax to keep her emotionally malleable'.
Another email sent to Epstein in 2013 by an unidentified person – thought to be a victim – says: 'The Xanax was not good. It knocked me out within 20 minutes of taking it. I could not wake up and had the craziest nightmares.'
Last night, Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'These revelations are jaw-dropping. If Mandelson was being provided with restricted drugs and Botox from Epstein, it shows the depths to which he had become dependent on this evil paedophile. The police should immediately investigate.'



Epstein arranged for Mandelson to get Botox while he was on a taxpayer-funded visit to New York in March 2010. Even though Epstein was under house arrest at the time, Mandelson – who was then Business Secretary and Gordon Brown's de facto Deputy Prime Minister – saw him twice. Ahead of the trip, Epstein asked Mandelson, 'do you need me' on March 3, to which the politician replied: 'Always need you... have an official dinner on 3rd then fly back. What about the injections??'

In response, Epstein asked him whether Wednesday afternoon would work. The next day, Epstein asked 'Wed face and neck?' with Mandelson saying, 'do you think I should', to which Epstein replied: 'Botox first step.' They went on to arrange times, but it is unclear whether the procedure went ahead. The MoS did find an invoice for 'Lipokit', a brand of cosmetic fat transfer injection, dated the same day Mandelson visited Epstein – but this is different from Botox.


Mandelson made an apparent reference to Xanax in an email sent on December 5, 2009, asking 'One triangle or two??' and Epstein replied saying 'one'.

Later that month, Epstein asked Mandelson, 'feeling better?', to which the politician replied: 'How will I get more triangles?!' And this was not the only drug Mandelson asked Epstein for.

On the day before his New York visit in 2010, he mentioned he was down to his last Niaspan pill – a prescription-only medication that lowers cholesterol and blood fat levels – and asked for more. Epstein confirmed he could get some, replying: 'Already done with triangles', to which Mandelson said: 'yippie'.

In June 2010, Mandelson appears to have asked about getting more Niaspan before adding: 'Triangles are all very well but you need someone to use them on…' Niaspan is not known to be a recreational or cosmetic drug, but Epstein was evangelical about its benefits. He told Mandelson to take it 'every day' and also to 'have your doctor give you a prescription... it will change your life'.

In March 2010, Epstein emailed Mandelson saying: 'After the election, we should change your meds. it causes dry nose and baggy eyes... there are much newer more effective pills with less side-effects.'


Mandelson, pictured here in a bathrobe, trusted Epstein enough to seek his medical advice

Mandelson, pictured here in a bathrobe, trusted Epstein enough to seek his medical advice

Xanax pills come in different shapes depending on their dosage, with the most potent being green and triangular

Xanax pills come in different shapes depending on their dosage, with the most potent being green and triangular
Mandelson replied: 'Haven't got dry nose! Rash lasted for hour, face, hands and body. So if doing morning press conference had better take after.'

Mandelson also told Epstein he was taking the antidepressant, Dosulepin, after revealing he was having 'major face rash'.

It is not clear where Mandelson obtained Dosulepin, as NHS guidance says it should not be prescribed for depression because it can be highly toxic and comes with significant cardiac risks.


But it is evident Mandelson trusted Epstein enough to seek his medical advice. As late as February 2011, the politician asked him when to take his medication when crossing time zones.

While it is known that Epstein's victims were given drugs, today's revelations are thought to be the first time they have been linked to his friends. It also appears that Epstein gave Mandelson clothes during his New York visit. Days after the trip, the Labour grandee emailed: 'Wearing new jumper with new shoes and belt. Thanks!'

Mandelson's lawyers last night refused to comment on any point raised in the MoS's investigation.

The peer – who remains under investigation on suspicion of misconduct in public office – has previously expressed his regret over his links with Epstein and called their friendship a 'most terrible mistake' and 'misplaced loyalty'.


This photo, released by the US Department of Justice as part of the Epstein Files, shows Peter Mandelson next to a woman wearing a bathrobe while is standing in his underwear

This photo, released by the US Department of Justice as part of the Epstein Files, shows Peter Mandelson next to a woman wearing a bathrobe while is standing in his underwear
 
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