Why is there a death Penalty?
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
CREATORS: America must be vigilant
CREATORS
January 27, 2026
Immigration
and Customs Enforcement is operating under an ill-advised internal memo
suggesting that ICE agents do not need to obtain a search warrant to enter a
home while investigating or enforcing illegal immigration. The memo is
misguided and an affront to the Fourth Amendment to the United States
Constitution.
The Fourth
Amendment is part of the Bill of Rights, added to the Constitution in 1791. In
its simplest form, it protects the people from an overzealous government. It
was important to the founding fathers over two-and-a-quarter centuries ago and
it is important today.
I have
written about the origins of the Fourth Amendment, but it bears revisiting. The
United Kingdom's greed in the late seventeenth century contributed to the
establishment of the Bill of Rights.
In
Britain, the prevailing economic philosophy of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries was to look to colonies to enrich the "mother country." To
that end, Britain did not want their colonies trading with any other countries.
To prevent trade with other nations, the British imposed high
"tariffs" on imported goods from countries other than Britain.
In return,
American colonists began smuggling goods from other countries into the
colonies. In response, Britain began cracking down on smugglers. The British
began utilizing writs of assistance. The writs gave customs officials enormous
power and discretion.
The writs
were general search warrants that did not have an expiration date, did not have
to provide a basis for suspicion or any particularity of the place or basis for
the search. They let officials enter the homes of colonists at any time for any
reason.
The greed
led to rebellion and, in no small part, to the revolution that ended with
independence for the United States of America.
When it
came time to draft a constitution for the new country, the Fourth Amendment was
written precisely to prevent the new government from running roughshod over its
citizens.
The Fourth
Amendment reads:
"The
right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects,
against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated and no
Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation
and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things
to be seized."
It is
among the most sacred safeguards of individual liberty embedded in the
Constitution.
According
to The Associated Press, ICE distributed a memo that provides agents with the
authority to forcibly enter homes and arrest immigrants using only a signed
administrative warrant if they also have a final order of removal issued by a
judge.
The
administrative warrant is not signed by a judge. People do not have to open
their doors, including the target of an immigration investigation, unless they
are shown a warrant signed by a judge. That guidance is rooted in Supreme Court
rulings that generally prohibit law enforcement from entering a home without
judicial approval.
It has
long been the law in this country that, like a soldier, a law enforcement agent
does not have to carry out an unlawful or unconstitutional order. Advising ICE
agents that they can forcibly enter a home without a warrant signed by a judge
is unconstitutional — obeying an unconstitutional order does not absolve an
officer of criminal or civil liability.
The Fourth
Amendment was how a burgeoning nation prevented tyranny. The colonists tasted
despotism and did not like it.
We are now
at a point in this nation where a government agency can come into your home any
time, day or night, to see who is in your home or to take into custody a person
who might be in this country without proper documentation. The colonists didn't
like it in 1776, and we don't like it today.
The work
of protecting the rights and privileges of the U.S. Constitution never ends.
America must be vigilant in protecting the rights of all men and women.
Matthew T.
Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book
The Executioner's Toll, 2010, was released by McFarland Publishing. You can
reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewTMangino
To visit Creators CLICK HERE
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
DOJ says taking a licensed, holstered firearm to a protest is a reason to get shot
Some high-profile gun rights activists and groups bristled at government officials’ claims that federal agents may have been justified in killing a Minneapolis man during a protest because he was carrying a pistol, according to The New York Times.
The right
to bear arms in public has been a mainstay of the gun rights movement.
On
Saturday, a Los Angeles federal prosecutor, Bill Essayli, became a magnet for
outrage when he wrote on
social media that “If you approach law enforcement with a gun, there
is a high likelihood they will be legally justified in shooting you. Don’t do
it!”
Gun Owners
of America, one of the country’s largest gun advocacy groups, said in its
own posting that it condemned his “untoward comments.”
The group
said that “federal agents are not ‘highly likely’ to be ‘legally justified’ in
‘shooting’ concealed carry licensees who approach while lawfully carrying a
firearm. The Second Amendment protects Americans’ right to bear arms while
protesting — a right the federal government must not infringe upon.”
The gun
group also accused “the Left” of “antagonizing” immigration agents.
The
exchange could point to political fissures between the gun rights movement and
President Trump, who is generally seen as an ally. And it already is sparking
debate within a movement that has long warned against government overreach.
The
National Rifle Association referred to federal agents as “jackbooted government
thugs” in a 1995
mailer. But in a statement Saturday night, the N.R.A. put blame for the
shooting on Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota and other “radical progressive
politicians.” It said their “calls to dangerously interject oneself into
legitimate law-enforcement activities have ended in violence.”
“As there
is with any officer-involved shooting, there will be a robust and comprehensive
investigation that takes place to determine if the use of force was justified,”
the group added.
In a
separate post, the N.R.A. called Mr. Essayli’s comments “dangerous and wrong.”
“Responsible
public voices should be awaiting a full investigation, not making
generalizations and demonizing law-abiding citizens,” it said.
Video
footage shows that Alex Jeffrey Pretti, an intensive care nurse at a
Veterans Affairs hospital, stepped between a woman and an agent pepper spraying
her, and then was sprayed himself. He appeared to hold a phone in one hand and
nothing in the other.
As agents
restrained him, one appeared to take his pistol, videos show, and then agents
opened fire, killing him.
Chief
Brian O’Hara of the Minneapolis police said that Mr. Pretti was an American
citizen with no known criminal record, and had a firearms permit allowing
him to carry a gun openly.
“We the
people have a right to bear arms in public,” Cam Edwards, a prominent gun
rights activist and radio host, said
in a social media post. “I’ve encountered countless police while I’ve been
armed, and never been shot. The presence of a firearm, by itself, is not an
indicator of a criminal intent or a threat to law enforcement.”
Gregory
Bovino, a top Border Patrol official leading the crackdown in Minneapolis, said
at a news conference on Saturday that Mr. Pretti “had two loaded magazines,”
and appeared to want to do “maximum damage and massacre law enforcement.”
No
evidence has been produced to back up that claim.
Dana
Loesch, a former spokeswoman of the National Rifle Association, highlighted Mr.
Bovino’s comments, saying in a social media post that “statements like this
don’t help. What he has or didn’t have isn’t the issue. What he was doing, with
or without it, is the issue. Did he draw on agents? Reach for it? Was it on
him?”
Christopher
Fernandez, an Orlando, Fla., firearms instructor and founder of Equality In
Arms Defensive Training, also took issue with Mr. Bovino. Mr. Fernandez said
the official had falsely characterized Mr. Pretti as “a crazed assailant
launching himself at C.B.P. officers, pistol drawn and firing with the intent
to slaughter as many of them as possible.”
He said
that the heavy-handed tactics of federal agents have left people on both sides
of the political spectrum “living in fear.”
He added:
“How can they not be when this is what we are seeing?”
The Trump
administration has argued strongly for the right to carry guns. A Justice
Department suit filed in December against the U.S. Virgin Islands over
its gun permitting process, for example, noted that “law-abiding citizens” have
“a fundamental right to ‘carry handguns publicly for self-defense.’”
Jordan
Levine, who runs an online gun rights advocacy company called A Better Way 2A,
said that “what happened in Minneapolis shows that ICE will treat the mere
presence of a legal firearm as justification for lethal force. Carrying a gun
is not a crime, yet it was readily used as proof of dangerous intent once Alex
Pretti was dead and unable to contest that narrative.”
Danielle
L. Campbell, who helped found Protect Peace, a community outreach group for gun
owners in Central and Southern Florida, said she was shocked after watching
video of the shooting.
“I’m
willing to wait for more facts to come out,” she said. “What I will say is
carrying a concealed weapon legally shouldn’t be a death sentence.”
To read more CLICK HERE
Monday, January 26, 2026
FBI’s search of Washington Post reporter’s home raises questions
The Washington Post's Hannah Natanson’s home was search, and as a result, many in the media and elsewhere have worried about a chilling effect on reporters and potential whistleblowers, reported Lawfare. Advocates have also invoked the First Amendment: The search, critics have insisted, was an unconstitutional encroachment on press freedom. Commentators have even agonized over the possibility that the search represented only the beginning of a more aggressive posture toward journalists—in which not only are leakers to the media prosecuted under the Espionage Act, but the media is prosecuted, too.
An Early
Morning Search
Jan. 14
was not a quiet day for Natanson. Early in the morning, the FBI conducted a
search of the Washington Post reporter’s home as part of an investigation into Aurelio Perez-Lugones for allegedly leaking the documents he mishandled, presumably to
Natanson. According to reports, Natanson had her cellphone, a recording device,
a Garmin watch, and two laptops seized, but was told that she was not the focus
of the investigation. The same morning, the government also issued the
Washington Post a subpoena requesting information related to
Perez-Lugones.
Natanson
is well-known for her coverage of the Trump administration, including efforts
to fire federal workers. She published
a story last week—which cited government documents obtained by the
Post—that covered the U.S.’s capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
But the
impetus for the search warrant in the case centered on Perez-Lugones, not
Natanson. The affidavit alleges that Perez-Lugones took notes on information
from a classified system on a notepad, which he then brought home. He is also
accused of taking a screenshot of a classified report about an unidentified
foreign country, speculated to be Venezuela. Investigators reportedly recovered
these materials during a search of his residence.
The
criminal complaint in the case does not charge Perez-Lugones with disclosing
that information, although a
separate filing mentioned the possibility of his disseminating it if
not detained pretrial—which prompted the judge in the case to issue a review of
his pretrial release.
Such
obscurity is not, in and of itself, atypical; arrests in classified documents
cases often proceed on the basis of allegations of mishandling of material and
are later superseded with updated charging documents if and when further
evidence is uncovered.
But in the
immediate aftermath of the search, Trump administration officials were quick to
suggest classified information had indeed been leaked. Attorney
General Pam Bondi commented on X:
This past
week, at the request of the Department of War, the Department of Justice and
FBI executed a search warrant at the home of a Washington Post journalist who
was obtaining and reporting classified and illegally leaked information from a
Pentagon contractor. The leaker is currently behind bars. I am proud to work
alongside Secretary Hegseth on this effort. The Trump Administration will not
tolerate illegal leaks of classified information that, when reported, pose a
grave risk to our Nation’s national security and the brave men and women who
are serving our country.
In a tweet
a few hours after the search, FBI Director
Kash Patel similarly implied a leak had occurred. He also claimed that
the “leaker” had been arrested that week—as opposed to on Jan. 9, the date the
affidavit in Perez-Lugones’s case was filed:
This
morning the @FBI and partners executed a search warrant of an individual at the
Washington Post who was found to allegedly be obtaining and reporting
classified, sensitive military information from a government
contractor—endangering our warfighters and compromising America’s national
security. The alleged leaker was arrested this week and is in custody. As this
is an ongoing investigation, we will have no further comment.
The search
of Natanson’s home quickly drew backlash from the public and the media,
particularly with regard to its implications for freedom of the press. Washington
Post Executive Editor Matt Murray said that the search was “deeply
concerning and raises profound questions and concern[s] around the
constitutional protections for our work.”
“It is
exceedingly rare, even in investigations of classified disclosures, for federal
agents to search a reporter’s home,” the
New York Times noted.
On Jan.
14—the same day that the FBI searched Natanson’s home—the Reporter’s Committee
for Freedom of the Press filed
a brief to unseal documents relating to the search of Natanson's home
and the seizure of her devices. The brief requested that the court unseal the
warrant in the case because “[t]he public is…left with no means to understand
the government’s basis for seeking (and a federal court’s basis for approving)
a search with dramatic implications for a free press and the constitutional
rights of journalists.” On Jan. 21, the FBI released the
search warrant for
Natanson’s home, although the application for that warrant remains
undisclosed to the public.
That same
day, The
Washington Post filed a brief requesting that federal law enforcement
return Natanson’s seized belongings, arguing that “almost none” of the
materials were relevant to the warrant and that the search “flouts the First
Amendment and ignores federal statutory safeguards for journalists.” A
magistrate judge ordered the
government to preserve but not review materials seized from Natanson (including
materials seized pursuant to two
separate search warrants for her car and her person) until further
briefing and scheduled a hearing on the matter for Feb. 6.
To read more CLICK HERE
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Texas prisons see spike in overdose deaths
K2 is a psychoactive drug that targets the same part of the brain as THC, but the effects can be far different from those of marijuana, in part because many doses have been heavily adulterated with harmful chemicals. Synthetic cannabinoids don’t make up a large part of the free-world drug market, but at least one study found their use is increasing. K2, also referred to as “spice,” has been circulating in prisons and state jails since at least 2017.
Worse, the
number of people whose deaths in state jails or prisons were attributed to
synthetic cannabinoids increased from 16 in 2023 to 65 the following year, reported the Texas Observer. And
this is likely an undercount, given that synthetic compounds can be difficult
for labs to detect in standard drug tests or postmortem toxicology screens.
The rise
in K2 deaths is part of a disturbing trend: Between January 2020 and July 2025,
at least 189 Texas prisoners died of drug-related causes—and each year through
2024 was deadlier than the last. In 110 cases, synthetic cannabinoids were
confirmed or suspected to have caused or contributed to in-custody deaths,
according to a Texas Observer analysis of reports filed to the
state’s Office of the Attorney General. Most overdoses were attributed to drugs
illicitly smuggled into state lockups. Another 128 people in the custody of the
Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) died of accidental or unknown
causes during that period that could have been linked to drug overdoses, based
on symptoms or circumstances described in related records, the Observer’s
analysis found.
The Office
of the Inspector General (OIG)—governed by the Texas Board of Criminal Justice
but independent from TDCJ itself—launched an investigation into Wiley’s
overdose the very same night. That’s routine in such cases, according to Amanda
Hernandez, communications director for the prison system. “TDCJ has zero
tolerance for illegal substances and contraband,” she said. “If any person,
whether that is inmate, staff, volunteer, [or] visitor is caught bringing
illicit substances into any TDCJ facility, the Office of Inspector General is
immediately called to investigate.”
Hutchins
saw three drug-related deaths in 2024, the most of any state jail. Wiley was
one of two confirmed K2-related deaths at the unit that year: Daniel Jacob
Sauceda, 22, died six months later of synthetic cannabinoid toxicity. Another
man, 62-year-old Victor Blanco, died April 18 after overdosing on prescription
drugs.
Hutchins
is part of a state jail system created in the 1990s primarily to house people
convicted of relatively minor drug and property crimes. State jails were billed
as places where low-level criminals serving short sentences, like Wiley, might
get help with addictions. But, over the years, experts say that state jails
experienced a kind of mission creep, as higher-level criminals were locked up
at the facilities and as drugs seemingly circulated freely. With a high
proportion of drug users, large and crowded living areas, scant educational
programming, and less advanced medical facilities than prisons, these units can
become breeding grounds for drug use.
For those
who do make it to their release dates, a 2019 state House committee report found
that their time has typically been wasted: “State jails … merely warehouse
inmates who unproductively serve out their time until being released, with no
new resources, into the same conditions that led them to jail in the first
place—most often, drug addiction and poverty,” the report reads, concluding the
facilities should be abolished or “overhauled in every respect.”
To read more CLICK HERE
Saturday, January 24, 2026
The corruption of the FBI in the words of current and former agents
When he returned to office last year, President Trump called the F.B.I. a “corrupt” agency in need of overhaul, reported The New York Times. He had by then been the subject of three F.B.I. investigations: Agents examined his 2016 campaign’s alleged ties to Russia, his retention of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago after leaving office and his attempts to overturn the 2020 election. Though all three inquiries took place in part or entirely under Christopher Wray, the F.B.I. director Trump appointed, he repeatedly accused the bureau of mounting a partisan attack against him.
To replace
Wray, Trump chose Kash Patel, a former public defender and intelligence
official who had never worked for the F.B.I. and had spun conspiracy theories
about the bureau. Since Patel’s confirmation last February, the F.B.I. has
undergone a transformation that has upended its nonpartisan rules and norms,
deeply rattling many of its 38,000 employees.
Patel has
fired agents who worked on the Trump investigations and radically changed the
bureau’s mission. More
than 20 percent of the F.B.I.’s work force has been assigned to
immigration enforcement, pulling agents and analysts away from investigating
public corruption, cybercrime, white-collar crime, drug trafficking and
terrorism. Patel has also been embroiled in controversies over his use of government
resources, his temperament and missteps in high-profile investigations.
We
interviewed 45 employees who work at the F.B.I. or who left during Trump’s
second term, as well as many other current and former government officials.
Beginning with Trump’s selection of Patel, our sources narrated the events that
most troubled them over the last year. Many details of what we learned are
reported here for the first time.
The F.B.I.
is a rule-bound and tight-lipped institution. Bureau policies prohibit active
employees from speaking to the news media without authorization. Even for
former employees, speaking out is a sign of serious alarm. Some of our sources
shared their stories anonymously because they feared retribution from the
administration. (To protect their identities, we are not indicating whether the
people we quote anonymously are still employed by the F.B.I.) We corroborated
their descriptions of specific events and conversations with colleagues,
contemporaneous notes and internal records.
Patel and
other F.B.I. leaders named in this article declined our requests for
interviews, and we followed up with a detailed list of questions. In response
to a request for comment, Ben Williamson, an F.B.I. spokesman, wrote: “This
story is a regurgitation of fake narratives, conjecture and speculation from
anonymous sources who are disconnected from reality. They can whine and peddle
falsehoods all they want — but it won’t change the facts that the F.B.I. under
this administration worked with partners at every level and delivered a
historic 2025.”
We also
asked the White House for comment. “President Trump and F.B.I. Director Kash
Patel are restoring integrity to the F.B.I. by returning its focus to fighting
crime and letting good cops be cops,” Abigail Jackson, a White House
spokeswoman, said in a statement.
Many
current and former employees fear, however, that the F.B.I. has become a weapon
of the White House, and that the firings and the diversion of resources to
immigration enforcement have left the country vulnerable to attack.
To read more CLICK HERE
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Last year recorded the lowest homicide rate in over a century
Last year will likely register the lowest national homicide rate in 125 years and the largest single-year drop on record, according to a new analysis of 2025 crime data, reported The New York Times.
Violence
has been falling for several years. But last year for the first time, all seven
categories of violent crime tracked by the analysis fell below prepandemic
levels. The numbers provide further evidence that the surge in violence in the
early 2020s was a departure during a time of massive social upheaval, not a new
normal.
The
analysis of data from 40 cities, by the Council on Criminal Justice, a
nonpartisan think tank, found across-the-board decreases in crime last year
compared to 2019: 25 percent fewer homicides, 13 percent fewer shootings and 29
percent fewer carjackings. Between 2024 and 2025, only drug crimes went in the
wrong direction, but they were still lower than in 2019.
To read more CLICK HERE
