

for
the week ending 29 March 2026
| Illegal Alien Charged With Murder After Allegedly Shoving Elderly Veteran Onto Subway Tracks (Daily Caller) — Officials charged an illegal alien from Honduras after an elderly veteran he allegedly shoved onto the New York subway tracks died. Bairon Hernandez, 34, faces a second-degree murder charge in connection with the March 8 incident, according to ABC 7 Eyewitness News. He is accused of attacking 83-year-old veteran of the Air Force Richard Williams as well as a 30-year-old man. Police said the attack occurred at 11:39 p.m., and no train was entering the station at the time, FOX 5 New York reported. The New York Police Department (NYPD)’s Crime Stoppers Division said Hernandez allegedly pushed Williams from behind in a post on X. Williams suffered bleeding in the brain, which required surgery, but doctors determined there was no activity in his brain afterward, according to FOX 5. Williams was placed on life support, but ultimately succumbed to his injuries, according to ABC 7. Police arrested Hernandez, and a court arraigned him on assault-related charges on March 11, FOX 5 reported. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner determined that Williams’ passing was a homicide on March 25. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said the suspect has been deported from the U.S. four times in a March 12 press release. See full story |
California Cemetery Removes Banner Draped Over 9/11 Memorial Advertising New Islamic Section After Backlash (Fox News) — A cemetery in the San Francisco Bay Area has removed a banner draped across a 9/11 memorial that advertised a new Islamic section after backlash from the community. NBC Bay Area reported that the owner of Memorial Gardens Cemetery said that he recently sold part of the property to a Muslim family, and that "he gave them permission to put up signage but did not authorize them to drape it over the 9/11 installation." The owner reportedly had the signage removed, but community residents said that the sign should not have been erected to begin with. NBC Bay Area reported that Danny Kimmel, a resident of Concord, California, said the banner advertising an Islamic memorial garden draped over the 9/11 memorial was placed in front of the cemetery where his mother was laid to rest. "I felt a punch to the gut type of thing," he said, according to the report. "To see that sign on that memorial is kind of nutty is my thoughts." Kimmel’s brother was killed in Vietnam, and he said his mother would be totally against the placement of the banner. "She wouldn’t just roll over -- she’d get up and walk," he said. See full story |
| Wiener Says Ice Was ‘Terrorizing A Mother’ While Filling In For TSA, But There’s Just One Problem (Amer Wire News) — Notoriously perverse California state Sen. Scott Wiener is under fire for spreading misinformation about the arrest of an illegal alien. Earlier this week on Monday, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) were deployed to a dozen major airports across the country to assist with crowd management and security lines. A day before this deployment, an illegal alien woman was apprehended at San Francisco International Airport. ... “ICE officers arrested Angelina Lopez-Jimenez and Wendy Godinez-Lopez at the San Francisco International Airport,” DHS explained in a tweet. “These illegal aliens had a final removal order of removal from an immigration judge since 2019.” “While being escorted to the international terminal for processing, Lopez-Jimenez attempted to flee and resisted law enforcement officers. ICE is working as quickly as possible to repatriate the family unit to their home country of Guatemala,” the tweet continued. See full story |
Captain Hauls In Nearly 500-Pound Sea Giant After Grueling Battle, Feeds Most Of Town (Fox News) — Captain Jose Rodriguez Jr. of Cudjoe Key, Florida, takes clients out four to five times a week on a Florida Keys fishing charter to reel in trophy fish. On Feb. 18, Rodriguez, along with a Pennsylvania family, landed a giant 480-pound swordfish, one of the largest of its kind caught in the Keys in recent years. "It was definitely a fight and a struggle," Rodriguez, who helps run the family business, Above & Below Fishing Adventures, told Fox News Digital in an interview. "We fought the fish for five hours, and it took us at least another half hour to control the fish on the side of the boat before we could pull it over the side," he said. See full story |
| Biden Officials Pushed COVID Booster Harder AFTER Surveillance Found Stroke Increase (Just the News) — The Biden administration pushed COVID-19 boosters for elderly people even harder after its vaccine safety surveillance systems discovered, as early as November 2022, "statistically significant safety signals for ischemic stroke" in that age group following uptake of the Pfizer bivalent, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., told Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy in a letter Monday, disclosed Wednesday. The Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations chair released nearly 2,000 pages of "relevant HHS records" in conjunction with the letter, in 10 batches, documenting the stroke signal and internal communications between officials "acknowledging significant statistical limitations in their ability to detect safety signals through their data analyses." The Biden White House next made edits to a draft Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Food and Drug Administration "communications plan" to increase booster uptake, in January 2023, that "downplayed the significance of the safety signal, changing a sentence that stated that the 'signal is moderately elevated' to the 'signal is slightly elevated,'" Johnson told Kennedy. See full story |
Indicted Democrat Rep Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick One Step Closer To Expulsion (Fox News) — A bipartisan panel of House lawmakers voted to kickstart a process that could lead to the expulsion of a congressional Democrat accused of laundering millions of disaster relief funds into her campaign account. The verdict came after a rare public ethics hearing on Thursday – the first since 2010 – that lasted more than six hours as lawmakers from both parties grilled Cherfilus-McCormick’s counsel. The eight-member adjudicatory subcommittee, helmed by Rep. Michael Guest, R-Miss., announced its decision in a written statement Friday morning. "After careful deliberation that lasted until well past midnight, the adjudicatory subcommittee found that Counts 1-15 and 17-26 of the SAV [statement of alleged violations] had been proven," committee leaders said in a statement. See full storry |
| U.S. Education Dept To Leave Current Headquarters As Dismantling Continues Under Trump WASHINGTON (Reuters) — President Donald Trump's administration said on Thursday the U.S. Education Department will leave its headquarters in Washington and relocate to a smaller office in the U.S. capital as the government continues efforts to dismantle the agency. "The U.S. Department of Education will move out of the Lyndon B. Johnson headquarters building," the Trump administration said, adding the Education Department headquarters building has been 70% vacant. "The U.S. Department of Energy will move out of its outdated James V. Forrestal building and assume the lease on the Lyndon B. Johnson building," the joint statement from the Education and Energy Departments added. The federal government cast its actions as a cost-saving move. It said the Energy Department's move to the Education Department headquarters will save taxpayers over $350 million in deferred maintenance costs. Trump promised during his 2024 election campaign to dismantle the Education Department as part of a bid to shrink the federal government's role in education in favor of more control by the states. See full story |
Pennsylvania Dems Go Silent, Pull Women's Month Resolution After GOP Asks For Simple Definition (Fox News) — Pennsylvania House Democrats withdrew consideration of a resolution honoring March as "National Women’s Month" after a Republican lawmaker filed an amendment to include the physiological definition of "woman" in the text. What was expected to be a quick, symbolic vote instead turned into a brief but telling floor moment, with Republicans forcing the question into the open and Democrats opting to shelve the resolution rather than define "woman" in legislation – leading to an eruption of laughter on the House floor. House Speaker Joanna McClinton, D-Southwest Philadelphia, was bringing a rapid-fire succession of bills up for consideration late in Tuesday’s session when she asked the clerk to introduce House Resolution 390. The bill, from state Rep. Carol Hill-Evans, D-York, recognized March as Women’s History Month in Pennsylvania. Hill-Evans wrote in her presentation of the bill that it "celebrat[es] the extraordinary accomplishments of women," which "too often go unacknowledged." See full story |
| Delivery Robots Shatter Chicago Bus Shelter Glass In Separate Incidents, Including One Caught On Camera (Fox Business) — Two delivery robots reportedly crashed into bus shelters in Chicago this week, shattering glass panels in separate incidents just days apart. One crash, captured on video Sunday, showed a delivery robot approaching a Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) bus stop along Racine Avenue in West Town before slamming into the shelter’s glass panel, FOX 32 Chicago reported. The impact sent shards falling onto the robot, identified as "Nasir" and operated by Serve Robotics, before it comes to a stop, FOX 32 reported. Serve Robotics said no one was injured, and crews quickly cleared the scene. See full story |
Archaeologists Unearth 1,600-Year-Old Christian Monastic Site With Paintings, Mysterious Inscription (Fox News) — Egyptian archaeologists recently unearthed the remnants of a Christian monastic site from the 5th century, some 400 years after the time of Jesus Christ. The Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities wrote in a translated statement March 23 that a building was recently found in the Qallaya area in Egypt's Beheira Governorate. The structure, likely a guesthouse used to host visitors, is a remnant of the "early beginnings of Coptic monasticism," the release said. Previous buildings have also been found at the site, and the newly discovered structure had 13 multipurpose rooms used for "hospitality and teaching … in addition to service facilities such as a kitchen and storage areas," officials said. See full story |