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    Trump, alongside first lady, to sign bill criminalizing revenge porn and AI deepfakes
    President Donald Trump is set to sign the Take It Down Act a bill that punishes internet abuse involving nonconsensual, explicit imagery.The president is scheduled to sign the bill from the White House Monday afternoon, joined by first lady Melania Trump, who has been championing the issue since her husband's inauguration.The Take It Down Act is a bill introduced in the Senate by Sens.Ted Cruz,R-Texas, and Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., that would make it a federal crime to publish, or threaten to publish, nonconsensual intimate imagery, including "digital forgeries" crafted by artificial intelligence. The bill unanimously passed the Senate in February, and passed in the House of Representatives in April with a vote of 4092.MELANIA TRUMP SPEAKS ON CAPITOL HILL FOR FIRST TIME IN ROUNDTABLE FOCUSED ON PUNISHING REVENGE PORNThe law would require penalties of up to three years in prison for sharing nonconsensual intimate images authentic or AI-generated involving minors and two years in prison for those images involving adults. It also would require penalties of up to two and a half years in prison for threat offenses involving minors, and one and a half years in prison for threats involving adults.The bill would require social media companies, like Snapchat, TikTok, Instagram and similar platforms, to put procedures in place to remove such content within 48 hours of notice from the victim.AI-generated imagesknown as "deepfakes" often involve editing videos or photos of people to make them look like someone else by using artificial intelligence. Deepfakes hit the publics radar in 2017 after a Reddit user posted realistic-looking pornography of celebrities to the platform, opening the floodgates to users employing AI to make images look more convincing and widely shared in the following years.Right now, nearly every U.S. state has a law protecting people from nonconsensual intimate image violations, but the laws vary in classification of crime and penalty.In March, the first lady spoke on Capitol Hill for the first time since returning to the White House to participate in a roundtable with lawmakers and victims of revenge porn and AI-generated deepfakes.The first lady invited 15-year-old Elliston Berry, whose high school peers used AI to create nonconsensual imagery of her and spread them across social media."Its heartbreaking to witness young teens, especially girls, grappling with the overwhelming challenges posed by malicious online content, like deepfakes," Trump said. "This toxic environment can be severely damaging. We must prioritize their well-being by equipping them with the support and tools necessary to navigate this hostile digital landscape. Every young person deserves a safe online space to express themselves freely, without the looming threat of exploitation or harm."REVENGE PORN BILL BACKED BY MELANIA TRUMP HEADS TO PRESIDENT'S DESK AFTER OVERWHELMING HOUSE VOTEBerry, a Texas native, told the roundtable she was just 14 years old when she realized in 2023 that"a past Instagram photo with a nude body and my face attached made from AI," was circulating on social media."Fear, shock and disgust were just some of the many emotions I felt," Berry said. "I felt responsible and began to blame myself and was ashamed to tell my parents. Despite doing nothing wrong. As I attended school, I was scared of the reactions of someone or someone could recreate these photos." "We need to hold big tech accountable to take action," the young woman continued. "I came here today to not only promote this bill, but to fight for the freedom of so many survivors, millions of people, male, female, teenage children, kids all are affected by the rise of this image-based sexual abuse. This is unacceptable. The Take It Down act will give a voice to the victims and provide justice."Another young girl, Francesca Mani of New Jersey, recounted that she also was just 14 when she and other peers found deepfake images on themselves online."Teenagers might not know all the laws, but they do know when something is wrong," Mani said. "Schools need to take immediate, serious action to ensure that AI exploitation, harassment and deepfake abuse are met with real consequences."The first lady invited the young women as her special guests for Trumps first address to a joint session of Congress in March. Sharing nonconsensual and AI-generated explicit images on social media and the internet has not just affected young girls, as young boys and adults also face similar crimes. A woman named Breeze Liu told the roundtable that she worked tirelessly to remove AI-generated images of herself that landed on a pornography site in 2020 when she was 24 years old.And Republican South Carolina state Rep. Brandon Guffey also joined the group of lawmakers and the first lady in March, recounting how his 17-year-old son committed suicide in 2022 after he was caught up in a sextortion scam."I lost my oldest son, Gavin Guffey, to suicide," he shared. "We quickly found out that he was being extorted online. That someone pretending to be a young female at another college requested images to be shared back and forth. And as soon as he shared those images, he took his life. It was an hour and 40 minutes from the time that he was contacted until the time that he took his life."Meanwhile, during the first Trump administration, Melania Trump hosted virtual roundtables on foster care as part of her "Be Best" initiative and focused on strengthening the child welfare system. The "Be Best" initiative also focused on online safety."As first lady, my commitment to the Be Best initiative underscores the importance of online safety," she said. "In an era where digital interactions are integral to daily life, it is imperative that we safeguard children from mean-spirited and hurtful online behavior."The first lady, in March, said the bill "represents a powerful step toward justice, healing and unity."
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    Mariska Hargitay reveals shocking family secret about her biological father
    Mariska Hargitay has been keeping a family secret for more than 30 years.At the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday, the "Law & Order: SVU" star revealed at the premiere of her documentary, "My Mom Jayne," that her biological father is former Las Vegas entertainer Nelson Sardelli. She was raised by late actor and bodybuilder Mickey Hargitay.The actress admitted to Vanity Fair that she struggled with the idea of "knowing Im living a lie my entire life." But the answer eventually became clear to her.'LAW & ORDER: SVU' STAR MARISKA HARGITAY'S REAL-LIFE HERO MOMENT DURING TV INTERVIEW"I grew up where I was supposed to, and I do know that everyone made the best choice for me," she said. "Im Mickey Hargitays daughter. That is not a lie. This documentary is kind of a love letter to him, because theres no one that I was closer to on this planet.""He was my everything, my idol," shared the 61-year-old about the patriarch, who died in 2006 at age 80. "He loved me so much, and I knew it. I also knew something else; I just didnt know what I knew."Growing up, Hargitay always felt she was different from her siblings, the outlet shared. It wouldnt be until her 20s that she learned why.In 1963, Hargitays mother, Jayne Mansfield, filed for divorce from Mickey. She then embarked on a high-profile romance with Sardelli. The actress went on to reconcile with Mickey several months before Hargitays birth in 1964.When Hargitay was in her 20s, someone showed her a photo of the Italian entertainer. According to the outlet, Hargitay "immediately knew in her bones" that Sardelli was her biological father."It was like the floor fell out from under me," she said in "My Mom Jayne."CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTERMansfield died in 1967 from injuries she sustained in a car crash. She was 34. Hargitay was 3 years old and asleep in the back seat of the car when it rammed into a truck.After suspecting that Sardelli was her biological father, she confronted Mickey. He denied it. According to the outlet, the encounter was "so shattering" that she never mentioned Sardelli to Mickey again.At age 30, Hargitay went to see Sardelli perform in Atlantic City. When she introduced herself, he burst into tears, telling her, "Ive been waiting 30 years for this moment."Hargitay suddenly became fiercely protective of her father, the man who raised her and her siblings after her mothers death."I went full Olivia Benson on him," she told Vanity Fair about her first meeting with Sardelli. "I was like, I dont want anything. I dont need anything from you I have a dad. There was something about loyalty. I wanted to be loyal to Mickey."Hargitay eventually forged a bond with Sardelli, 90, and his daughters. But when it came time to tell her story, she said "many people" were hesitant about the film coming out. But in time, both families gave Hargitay their blessing. The documentary features interviews with Hargitays siblings: Jayne Marie, Zoltan and Mickey Jr.LIKE WHAT YOURE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSThe Sardelli sisters "wept and wept" when they saw a private screening of the documentary in Las Vegas, the outlet revealed."These two women that I love so much I made them secrets!" said Hargitay. "Its so heartbreaking to me. Im not good with lies. So, I also made this movie to unburden all of us."The film also helped Hargitay address the loss of her mother."I dont remember the accident," she said. "I dont even remember being told that my mom had died. I looked at photos, and I dont really remember anything until I was 5."Mansfield, born Vera Jayne Palmer, was an aspiring actress who spoke several languages and played violin and piano. A casting director suggested she bleach her hair, wear tighter dresses and adopt a Marilyn Monroe-inspired voice. The "dumb blonde" persona stuck and Mansfield skyrocketed to fame in Hollywood. But like Monroe, Mansfield struggled to be taken seriously as an actress.WATCH: QUEEN ELIZABETH FELT SORRY FOR MARILYN MONROE: AUTHOR"When I would hear that fake voice, it used to just flip me out," Hargitay recalled. "'Why is she talking like that? Thats not real.' [But] my dad would always say, She wasnt like that at all. She was like you. She was funny and irreverent and fearless and real.'"
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    Trump considers former defense attorney Emil Bove for federal appeals court vacancy
    President Donald Trump is considering Justice Department official Emil Bove, his former defense attorney, for a U.S. appeals court vacancy a controversial nomination that would come as he continues to attack so-called "activist" judges for blocking his agenda.Bove, 44, is among those Trump is considering for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, which covers Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware.There are currently two vacancies on the court increasing the odds that Bove's name could be floated by Trump. If confirmed, he would serve a lifetime appointment on the federal bench.Bove's name is not the only one being considered, familiar sources say, and conversations are believed to be in the early stages.JUDGE ON WARPATH PRESSES TRUMP DOJ ON ABREGO GARCIA DEPORTATION, ANSWERS LEAVE COURTROOM IN STUNNED SILENCEPrior to his installation at the Justice Department, Bove spent nearly 10 years as a U.S. prosecutor for the Southern District of New York.He also defended Trump in two of his criminal trials following his first term in the White House.In each of these roles and at DOJ, Bove's hard-charging tactics have solidified his reputation as a fierce, loyal and, at times, aggressive leader.At the Justice Department, Bove has emerged as the man behind some of the administration's most contentious actions prompting some officials to resign rather than carry out his marching orders.Shortly after taking office, he sent a memo threatening state and city officials with criminal charges or civil penalties if they failed to comply with the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration or slow-walked their orders on enforcement."Federal law prohibits state and local actors from resisting, obstructing and otherwise failing to comply with lawful immigration-related commands," Bove said in the memo.TRUMP'S REMARKS COULD COME BACK TO BITE HIM IN ABREGO GARCIA DEPORTATION BATTLEIt was Bove who ordered federal prosecutors for the Southern District of New York to file a motion to dismiss charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams.That order prompted a string of resignations from personnel, including acting U.S attorney for the section Danielle Sassoon to leave DOJ rather than drop the case.Bove, along with Edward Sullivan from the Justice Department's Public Integrity Section, eventually signed on to the motion themselves.Fox News also reported earlier this year that Bove was behind an exhaustive questionnaire sent to FBI agents detailing their roles in the Jan. 6 investigations.Questions ranged from agents' participation in any grand jury subpoenas to whether the agents worked or responded to leads from another FBI field office or if they worked as a case agent for investigations.FBI AGENTS GROUP TELLS CONGRESS TO TAKE URGENT ACTION TO PROTECT AGAINST POLITICIZATIONFormer Justice Department officials have cited concerns that the probe or any retaliatory measures carried out as a result could have a chilling effect on the work of the FBI, including its more than 52 separate field offices.The group cited in particular the order from acting then-Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove to terminate the entire FBI senior leadership team and the assistant director in charge of the Washington Field Office.Bove would face a highly uncertain path to confirmation if nominated. The news comes at a time when Democrats have sharply excoriated what they argue are Trump's attempts to install loyalists to head up the DOJ and FBI.The White House and Justice Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.
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    Reagan admin official who helped America defeat communism dead at age 83
    Michael A. Ledeen, a major American historian and intellectual, died after suffering a series of small strokes on Sunday at his residence in Maryland. He was 83 years old. Ledeen was a vigorous participant in contributing to the demise of the communist Soviet Union and its Iron Curtain allies in Eastern Europe.Ledeen served as a special advisor on terrorism to President Ronald Reagans secretary of state, Alexander Haig, and later worked as a consultant for the National Security Council.Writing for the Asia Times, author and journalist David P. Goldman argued that Ledeens "personal contribution to Americas victory in the Cold War is far greater than the public record shows."Goldman noted that the Reagan administration, in 1983, sent Ledeen, a scholar of Italian history and fascism, to meet Italian Prime Minister Bettino Craxi to convince the Italian leader to allow the U.S. to deploy Pershing missiles to counter rising Soviet jingoism. Goldman added, "The incident reflects the high trust that Ledeen commanded in the Reagan administration and the strategic role that he played."TRUMP SAYS US HAS GIVEN IRAN PROPOSAL FOR NUCLEAR DEALAfter Italy accepted the Pershings, the then-Social Democratic German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, who was reluctant for his nation to be first to house Pershing missiles, agreed to Reagans demand.Leeden was a fan of former anti-communist American philosopher Sidney Hook, who declared during the Cold War that "Freedom is a fighting word."Ledeen would take his hard-charging world view against a new set of U.S. enemies after the ground zero of communism was defeated: radical Islamism in Iran, North Koreas totalitarian regime, and Arab and Latin American despots bent on the eradication of the U.S.In 2003, while working as the resident scholar in the Freedom Chair at the American Enterprise Institute,Ledeen wrote about former President George W. Bushs Axis of Evil (Iran, North Korea and Iraq), "Most commentators ridiculed the very idea of the Axis of Evil, just as they laughed at Reagans description of the Soviet Union as an Evil Empire. The deep thinkers laughed at Reagan, and then somberly warned that such language was not only misguided but provocative, as if the Kremlin would be more aggressive as a result of the presidents speech."Ledeen stressed the importance of American leadership breeding inspiration among dissidents trapped in totalitarian systems: "The greatest of the Soviet freedom fighters, from[Vladimir] Bukovsky to [Natan] Sharansky, have since written about the surge of hope they felt when they saw that the American president understood why they were fighting."He would bring his same intellectual freedom toolkit to his principal worry in this century: the Islamic Republic of Iran. Ledeen garnered enormous respect and praise from Iranian dissidents seeking to dissolve the theocratic regime in Tehran, the worlds worst state-sponsor of terrorism, according to the U.S. State Department.His wife, Barbara, told Fox News Digital about her late husband, "My only regret is that he didnt outlive the regime."IRANS LONG TRAIL OF DECEPTION FUELS SKEPTICISM OVER NEW NUCLEAR DEAL AS TALKS CONTINUELeeden did not advocate military intervention in Iran. He was in the business of replicating Reagans anti-Soviet playbook for Irans clerical regime.He told Fox News Brit Hume in 2005 that "the Western world, and in particular the United States" needs to support political prisoners in Iran and demonstrations against the regime.He told Hume,"We should be giving money to the various ... Farsi-language broadcasters, some here, some in England, some in Sweden and so forth, some in Germany, to go on the air and share with the Iranian people the now-demonstrated techniques for a successful, nonviolent revolution."He coined the phrase "Faster, please!" for his widely read blog at PJ Media to denote the great urgency to dismantle Americas enemies and stop Islamist-animated terrorism.Ledeen was born in Los Angeles in 1941 and authored numerous books on national security, including "Perilous Statecraft: An Insiders Account of the Iran-Contra Affair." Heearned a Ph.D. in history and philosophy from the University of WisconsinMadison. His academic advisor at Wisconsin was the prominent historian George Mosse, who fled Nazi Germany because of antisemitism.Ledeen cultivated a new generation of academics, journalists, think tank scholars and authors at his Chevy Chase home. His residence became a kind of informal salon forintellectuals and foreign policy types who had freshly arrived in Washington, D.C.He was also a top-level bridge player and won a national championship, the Truscott/U.S.P.C. Senior Teams. He is survived by his wife, a daughter, Simone, who served as a deputy assistant secretary of defense during the first Trump administration, and his two sons, former Marine Corps officers Gabriel and Daniel.
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    Gleason score for prostate cancer: What to know about Biden's diagnosis
    Joe Biden has been diagnosed with an "aggressive form" of prostate cancer.Bidens team shared a statement on Sunday that the former president was experiencing "increasing urinary symptoms" ahead of his diagnosis, which was characterized by a Gleason score of 9 (grade group 5) with "metastasis to the bone.""While this represents a more aggressive form of the disease, the cancer appears to be hormone-sensitive, which allows for effective management. The president and his family are reviewing treatment options with his physicians," the statement said.JOE BIDEN DIAGNOSED WITH AGGRESSIVE FORM OF PROSTATE CANCER WITH METASTASIS TO THE BONEBidens ranking of 9 on the Gleason scale, a grading system for prostate cancer severity, has sparked concerns, as it correlates with high-grade cancer.Dr. Arpeet Shah, a urologist with Associated Urological Specialists in Illinois, explained in an interview with Fox News Digital how the grading system indicates the aggressiveness of the disease."Its based on what the cancer cells look like under a microscope specifically, how different they look from normal prostate cells," he said. (Shah was not involved in Biden's care.)PROSTATE CANCER CASES SPIKE IN THIS US STATE AS DOCTORS SHARE LIKELY REASONPathologists assign two numbers from 1 to 5, based on the most common and second-most common patterns present in the tissue.The lower the grade, the more normal the cancer cells look, according to Cleveland Clinic.Descriptions of the grades are listed below.Grade 1 Cancer cells look like normal cells.Grades 2 to 4 Cancer cells in the tissue look less like normal cells.Grade 5 Cancer cells look very abnormal.For more Health articles, visitwww.foxnews.com/healthThe largest areas with cancer are graded and then added together to determine a Gleason score, which typically ranges from 6 to 10."The higher the score, the more aggressive the cancer is likely to be," Shah said.Below is a breakdown of Gleason score ranges.Gleason score of 6: Cancer is low-grade and slow-growing.Gleason score of 7: Cancer is intermediate and more likely to grow or spread over time.Gleason score of 8 to 10: Cancer is high-grade and may need more aggressive treatment.The system is "one of the key tools" experts use to "help guide treatment decisions and to have meaningful conversations with patients about their options," Shah commented.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER"It's important to highlight the importance of early here," he said. "Had President Biden undergone regular prostate cancer screening with a PSA blood test and digital rectal exam, his diagnosis might have been detected sooner."In an appearance on "The Big Weekend Show" on Sunday, Fox News medical contributor and board-certified radiologist Dr. Nicole Saphier noted that much like breast cancer, prostate cancer comes in different forms and can be treated "very differently" per case.Saphier confirmed that Bidens metastasized cancer is stage 4, which "significantly" decreases the chance of survival."No two cases are exactly the same," she said. "But the one good thing that they did mention about President Bidens case is that its hormone-sensitive."This form can be treatable through surgery or medication that will stop the testosterone production that fuels cancer growth."[Stage 4] is the worst-case scenario when you're talking about cancer, but we have so many treatments these days that you can actually live for quite a long time with stage 4 cancers," Saphier said."In his case, because it is hormone-sensitive, there are treatment methods," she continued."It's never going to cure him. He's never not going to have stage 4 cancer. But he could get to the point where he has no evidence of disease or certain no progression of disease. And at this point, that's what our goal is."Fox News Stepheny Price and Peter Doocy contributed to this report.
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    GOP lawmaker rallies around Trump's tax-cut campaign as competitive 2026 House race looms: 'Big issue'
    BETHLEHEM, PA Freshman GOP Rep. Ryan Mackenzie flipped a congressional seat in the Lehigh Valley just six months ago, but with competitive midterm elections expected in 2026, Americans for Prosperity (AFP) is already building its grassroots coalition in his swing district.It's an off-election year for Mackenzie, who unseated longtime Democrat Rep. Susan Wild in November, but as the 42-year-old jogged through neighborhood blocks in Bethlehem and greeted constituents at their doors on Saturday afternoon, the newest Pennsylvania congressman still has 17 months before his first re-election challenge.Mackenzie joined AFP activists in the Lehigh Valley on Saturday for a day of action, designed to educate constituents on his work to extend President Donald Trump's 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) and pass Trump's "big, beautiful bill" as budget negotiations continue back on Capitol Hill. He said it was his first time door knocking since winning in November."We have a tremendous opportunity as members of Congress to actually pass transformative legislation which will bring down taxes and the cost of living for not only individuals, but small businesses all across this country. For the past four years, we've seen that inflation has been out of control, driving up the prices of everything food, fuel, housing, healthcare," Mackenzie told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview.GOP REPS, ADVOCACY GROUP TO TARGET COMPETITIVE HOUSE DISTRICTS IN TRUMP TAX-CUT PUSH"It's been very difficult for people to make ends meet. That was a big issue in the campaign, and now we have that opportunity to deliver, as members of Congress, with significant tax reform and tax relief," Mackenzie added.CONGRESSIONAL DEMOCRATS TARGETING DOZENS OF HOUSE REPUBLICAN-HELD SEATS IN 2026 MIDTERM BATTLE FOR MAJORITYConservative holdouts stalled a procedural vote for reconciliation on Friday, prompting House leaders to return to the Hill late Sunday night to continue negotiations. Meanwhile, Trump is urging House Republicans to pass his "big, beautiful bill" following his high-profile diplomatic trip to the Middle East last week."Ultimately, we do have to get a resolution that satisfies 218 members of Congress. We're very close to doing that, and this is all part of the process. Nobody should be upset or concerned about any kind of little bumps in the road, because ultimately, we're going to come together to do what's right for the American people," Mackenzie said.The conservative advocacy group teamed up with GOP Reps. David Schweikert and Juan Ciscomani of Arizona, Ashley Hinson of Iowa, Tom Barrett of Michigan and Mackenzie of Pennsylvania for door-knocking, phone banks and grassroots organizing in a show of support for Trump's tax cuts this weekend telling constituents how their representatives are working to alleviate financial burden for everyday Americans.AFP shared with Fox News Digital that they reached over 90,000 voters on Saturday."Americans for Prosperity Pennsylvania has been on the ground knocking doors, making calls, hosting events, and organizing demonstrations to educate and show the urgency for Congress to make provisions of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act permanent," Emily Greene, Americans for Prosperity Pennsylvania State Director, told Fox News Digital."Were talking with taxpayers and business owners every day who understand that Congress needs to get to work we cant risk facing the largest tax hike in American history. After four years of record-high inflation, taxpayers deserve better."AFP launched the day of action in conjunction with a $20 million "Protect Prosperity" campaign, which the advocacy group called the single largest investment of any outside group dedicated to preserving the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.And it's no coincidence that AFP focused its attention on competitive congressional districts in Arizona, Iowa, Michigan and Pennsylvania this weekend, as contentious races are expected in 2026. While Saturday's day of action was designed to spotlight how Republican representatives are working in Washington, D.C., to boost the economy for everyday Americans back home, it also launched an early messaging campaign.As Democrats try to win back control in the House of Representatives in 2026, AFP is getting ahead of Democrats' likely attacks on vulnerable Republicans' support for Trump's "big, beautiful bill" by telling Republican voters that their representatives are delivering for them.
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    Palm Beach fertility clinic bomber documented plans in chilling online posts before attack
    Authorities have identified the perpetrator behind the weekend bombing at a fertility clinic in Palm Beach, California, as a 26-year-old suspect motivated by a fringe ideology known as "pro-mortalism.""Pro-mortalism," a radical offshoot of anti-natalism, views human reproduction as inherently immoral and embraces death as a moral corrective.According to federal and local law enforcement, the suspect targeted the American Reproductive Centers facility specifically to destroy human embryos stored on-site.Surveillance footage and online postings suggest he parked in the rear of the building to remain unnoticed, ingested drugs, and then detonated an explosive device killing himself in the process.The FBI has classified the bombing as an act of domestic terrorism, citing the ideological motivation behind the violence that killed the suspect and injured four others.PALM SPRINGS BOMBING SUSPECT IDENTIFIEDOn its Facebook page, American Reproductive Centers wrote that all embryos "are safe.""I received a call saying there was a massive explosion that destroyed a couple of our buildings. My biggest concern was obviously my staff and the embryos we have in storage," said Dr. Maher Abdallah, the clinic's director. "Fortunately for us, our staff was unharmed and the IVF lab is intact, untouched, unharmed. The embryos are safe."Retired NYPD investigator and Fox News contributor Paul Mauro, through his publication Ops Desk, exclusively uncovered a disturbing trail of digital breadcrumbs left by the suspect, who had posted videos documenting his experiments with homemade explosives.The videos, posted on his YouTube channel but now taken down, captured the alleged suspect testing explosives in the desert as well as what appeared to be a garage.The Ops Desk also revealed that he left behind a suicide note on an online forum populated by like-minded extremists."I have made a device that, once triggered, will activate after one hour and will ensure I never wake up again," he wrote."The reason for the hour delay after being triggered is that I want to be asleep once it activates. I attempted with it last night in the middle of the desert, but my drug combo failed to force me to sleep as I am not experienced with drugs in general. I took 120mg of codeine (4x #3 codeine tablets) and 15ml of promethazine (would have taken more but that's all I had).""Any ideas what might be a good combo that would make it impossible for me to stay awake? I don't really have access to anything besides codeine, alcohol, and basic things like Benadryl & Nyquil. Nyquil does tend to make me very tired. I still have a good amount of codeine left, (5x #3 codeine tablets and also some codeine cough syrup)."FBI, DHS WARN OF POSSIBLE COPYCAT ATTACKS AFTER NOLA ISIS-INSPIRED VEHICLE ATTACKIn another post, he wrote about "finally being gone." He shared that he would mix the bomb materials "in a bucket in my car.""I want the reaction to progress rapidly, but not so rapid that it foams out of the bucket. I do want foaming, just not overflow. The amount is 900 ml of 95% formic acid (0.95 g/ml) and probably around 1200 ml of sulfuric acid," he wrote. "The heated sulfuric acid will be at around 70 C, and if when I pour that in, it foams too much, I will mix in a bit of the room temp stuff to cool it down a bit.""You probably get the idea. Should work good enough. I'll be wearing a half-piece respirator with 3M acid gas cartridges to mitigate breathing in formic acid fumes (sulfuric not an issue, vapor pressure is low). If there's enough of it vaporizing, it may affect my eyes and maybe even skin, but l'll just close my eyes. If it affects my skin, oh well, I'll be passed out very quick anyways, and I'll be on opiates."WATCH:CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPOfficials have said that it is the first high-profile case linked to the pro-mortalist ideology and are now monitoring it as a potential emerging threat. Authorities have urged families and communities to remain vigilant for signs of ideological extremism, especially among those who may feel disenfranchised.As the investigation into the bombing continues, law enforcement is probing whether anyone else assisted or encouraged the suspect in constructing the device.
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    CBS correspondent Scott Pelley hits Trump for suing journalists 'for nothing' in fiery commencement speech
    "60 Minutes" correspondent Scott Pelley took a not-so-subtle shot at President Donald Trump over what Pelley suggested was his baseless lawsuit against CBS News in a fiery commencement address at Wake Forest University."Why attack universities? Why attack journalism? Because ignorance works for power," Pelley told Wake Forest graduates Monday. "First, make the truth seekers live in fear, sue the journalists and their companies for nothing. Then, send masked agents to abduct a college student who wrote an editorial in her college paper defending Palestinian rights and send her to a prison in Louisiana charged with nothing. Then move to destroy the law firms that stand up for the rights of others.""With that done, power can rewrite history with grotesque false narratives. They can make criminals heroes and heroes criminals. Power can change the definition of the words we use to describe reality. Diversity is now described as illegal. Equity is to be shunned. Inclusion is a dirty word. This is an old playbook, my friends. There's nothing new in this."CBS NEWS CEO WENDY MCMAHON ABRUPTLY RESIGNS, CITES DISAGREEMENT WITH COMPANY AMID CHALLENGING PERIODEarlier in the speech, he offered a dire warning to the graduates while urging them that their time to lead in the world is now."In this moment, this moment, this morning, our sacred rule of law is under attack. Journalism is under attack. Universities are under attack. Freedom of speech is under attack," Pelley said. "And insidious fear is reaching through our schools, our businesses, our homes and into our private thoughts, the fear to speak in America. If our government is, in Lincoln's phrase, 'Of the people, by the people, for the people,' then why are we afraid to speak?"White House communications director Steven Cheung ripped Pelley for not coming out more openly about Trump, since Pelley never mentioned his name."If Scott Pelley has something to say, he should be more clear. Otherwise, hes just another coward hiding behind riddles, like a clown," Cheung told Fox News Digital.CBS News didn't respond to a request for comment.PARAMOUNT FACING MOUNTING PRESSURE FROM CBS STARS, DEM LAWMAKERS AS COMPANY MULLS SETTLING TRUMP LAWSUITPelley's comments come as lawyers for Trump and CBS News' parent company Paramount Global enter mediation in hopes of resolving Trump's $20 billion lawsuit against the network over election interference allegations.CBS News has faced turmoil in recent months over the lawsuit.Overlapping with Pelley's address at Wake Forest University was the abrupt resignation of CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon on Monday, who cited tensions within the company."Leading this extraordinary organization has been the honor of a lifetime because I got to work alongside all of you," McMahon wrote. "At the same time, the past few months have been challenging. Its become clear that the company and I do not agree on the path forward. Its time for me to move on and for this organization to move forward with new leadership."TRUMP, CBS PARENT COMPANY SET FOR MEDIATION IN $20 BILLION 60 MINUTES LAWSUITMcMahon's resignation came weeks after the abrupt exit of "60 Minutes" executive producer Bill Owens, who claimed he could no longer maintain editorial independence. There had been reports that Shari Redstone, Paramount's controlling shareholder, wanted to "keep tabs" on upcoming "60 Minutes" segments involving Trump and urged CBS execs to delay any sensitive reporting on Trump until after the merger deal closed with Skydance Media, which seeks FCC approval.Last month, Pelley called out Paramount on-air over Owens' exit, linking the corporate pressure on "60 Minutes" to Trump's lawsuit and the merger plans."No one here is happy about it, but in resigning, Bill proved one thing. He was the right person to lead 60 Minutes all along," Pelley told viewers.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPThe CBS lawsuit stems from the editing of an exchange then-Vice President Kamala Harris had with "60 Minutes" correspondent Bill Whitaker, who asked her why Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wasn't "listening" to the Biden administration.Harris was widely mockedfor the "word salad" answer that aired in a preview clip of the interview on "Face the Nation." However, when the same question aired during the primetime special, Harris had a different, more concise response. Critics at the time accused CBS News of editingHarris' "word salad" answerto shield her from further backlash leading up to Election Day.The released raw transcript and footage showed that both sets of Harris' comments came from the same response, but CBS News had aired only the first half of her response in the "Face the Nation" preview clip and aired the second half during the primetime special.
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    Conservative rips blue state Republican's proposal to raise taxes on wealthy in SALT debate
    EXCLUSIVE: A conservative Republican said he's opposed to his moderate colleague's proposal for a modest tax hike on high-income earners, as GOP lawmakers continue to navigate divisions over President Donald Trump's "one big, beautiful bill.""Well, think about that higher taxes to pay for something that is pretty much self-inflicted by all the states that don't have their financials in order," Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, told Fox News Digital on Sunday.It comes as various House Republican factions are locked in high-stakes debates on taxes, Medicaid, and green energy subsidies while crafting Trump's wide-ranging bill.Rep. Nick LaLota, R-N.Y., suggested over the weekend that increasing the top tax bracket to a 39.6% income tax rate rather than 37% could help pay for higher deduction caps for state and local taxes (SALT).TRUMP'S 'BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL' PASSES KEY HOUSE HURDLE AFTER GOP REBEL MUTINYThe 39.6% rate refers to the top income tax bracket before it was lowered by Trumps 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA).SALT deduction caps primarily benefit people living in high-cost-of-living areas like New York City, Los Angeles, and their surrounding suburbs.Republicans representing those areas, including LaLota, have argued that raising the SALT deduction cap is an existential issue and that a failure to address it could cost the GOP the House majority in the 2026 midterms.Several of the Republicans vying for higher SALT deduction caps have pointed out that their victories are critical to the party retaining control of the House in 2024.SALT deduction caps did not exist before TCJA, which notably instilled a $10,000 ceiling for married and single tax filers."The One Big Beautiful Bill has stalledand it needs wind in its sails. Allowing the top tax rate to expirereturning from 37% to 39.6% for individuals earning over $609,350 and married couples earning over $731,200breathes $300 billion of new life into the effort," LaLota wrote on X."Its a fiscally responsible move that reflects the priorities of the new Republican Party: protect working families, address the deficit, fix the unfair SALT cap, and safeguard programs like Medicaid and SNAPwithout raising taxes on the middle class."But Republicans in lower-tax states are largely wary of significant increases to those caps, believing them to incentivize blue states' high-tax policies."People with money invest, and to tax them more history has been, when you tax the other upper 1% more, you know, the economy does worse," Norman argued. "More taxes don't make sense to me."The current legislation would increase the SALT deduction cap from $10,000 to $30,000, but a majority of Republicans in the House SALT Caucus rejected the deal.LaLota and others have contended it's not enough for middle-class families in their districts."My partys $30K cap proposal only makes 4 in 5 households whole. Thats not enough. On [Long Island], $250K isnt richit barely covers the basics. Too many families pay over $15K in property taxes & get left out. Im fighting for a higher cap. Wish me luck," he said on X.But while tax hike proposals targeting wealthy Americans were part of Republicans' negotiations at an earlier point, any such effort appears to have been all but definitively stamped out.House GOP leadership aides signaled to reporters on Monday morning that such a tax hike would not be in the final bill, pointing to Speaker Mike Johnson's comments on the matter.Johnson, R-La., said on The Will Cain Show late last month that he was "not in favor of raising the tax rates, because our party is the group that stands against that, traditionally."HOUSE GOP TARGETS ANOTHER DEM OFFICIAL ACCUSED OF BLOCKING ICE AMID DELANEY HALL FALLOUTBut nevertheless, the differing viewpoints underscore the divisions that Republicans still have to navigate ahead of their planned House-wide vote on Trump's bill later this week.Republicans are using the budget reconciliation process to advance Trump's priorities on taxes, immigration, energy, defense and the national debt via one massive bill.Budget reconciliation lowers the Senates threshold for passage from 60 votes to 51, thereby allowing the party in power to skirt the minority in this case, Democrats to pass sweeping pieces of legislation, provided they deal with the federal budget, taxation or the national debt.Republican leaders want to have a final bill on the presidents desk by Fourth of July.Fox News Digital reached out to LaLota's office for comment on Norman's remarks but did not immediately hear back.
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    Trump descends on Capitol Hill to patch Republican divides on his 'one big, beautiful bill'
    President Donald Trump will descend on Capitol Hill Tuesday morning where hes expected to meet with House Republicans on his "one, big, beautiful bill."Trump is attending the House GOPs weekly conference meeting, three House GOP sources and two White House officials confirmed to Fox News Digital and Fox News Radio, respectively. Its normally an hour-long session behind closed doors in which Republicans discuss the weeks agenda and any outstanding issues.The president is expected to rally Republicans around the massive piece of legislation designed to advance his agenda on tax, immigration, defense, energy, and raising the debt limit.Its a significant escalation in the presidents involvement in the process so far.TRUMP'S 'BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL' PASSES KEY HOUSE HURDLE AFTER GOP REBEL MUTINYHouse Republicans, meanwhile, have several critical differences to resolve before their self-imposed deadline to pass the bill by Memorial Day.Conservatives are pushing for the bill to be more aggressive on cutting waste, fraud, and abuse in the Medicaid system, including a faster timeline for implementing work requirements for able-bodied recipients. Currently, the legislation has work requirements kicking in 2029.Moderates, meanwhile, have been wary of making significant cuts to the program.Fiscal hawks are also pushing for a total and near-immediate repeal of the former Biden administrations green energy subsidies in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), noting it was a Trump campaign promise while other Republicans have pointed out businesses in their districts are benefiting from the tax relief.HOUSE GOP TARGETS ANOTHER DEM OFFICIAL ACCUSED OF BLOCKING ICE AMID DELANEY HALL FALLOUTTheres also disagreement over raising the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap, a critical issue for blue state Republicans representing high-cost-of-living districts. GOP lawmakers in lower-tax states have dismissed it as a giveaway to high-tax Democrat-controlled areas, however.News of Trumps likely appearance on Capitol Hill comes after Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said on a lawmaker-only call on Monday morning that the president is ready and willing to play an active role in discussions."He wants to be involved as much as we need him," Johnson told House GOP colleagues.The speaker also said he spoke with Trump by phone on Monday morning, and the president was "very excited, very encouraged."Republicans are working to pass Trumps policies on tax, immigration, energy, defense, and the national debt all in one massive bill via the budget reconciliation process.GOP lawmakers also see it as an opportunity to put the country on a better fiscal path, with the national debt already having surpassed $36 trillion.Budget reconciliation lowers the Senates threshold for passage from 60 votes to 51, thereby allowing the party in power to skirt the minority in this case, Democrats to pass sweeping pieces of legislation, provided they deal with the federal budget, taxation, or the national debt.House Republicans are hoping to advance Trumps bill through the House by the end of this week, with a goal of a final bill on the presidents desk by Fourth of July.The House Rules Committee, the final gatekeeper before a House-wide vote, is set to take up the bill at 1 a.m. on Wednesday.
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