All posts tagged: FBI

FBI director slams sheriff over Nancy Guthrie case

FBI director slams sheriff over Nancy Guthrie case

IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Firefighters return American flag in moving act of patriotism 01:23 Backlash from Democrats over GOP request for taxpayer money for White House ballroom 01:34 Evacuation plan for cruise ship with deadly virus on board 02:03 Now Playing FBI director slams sheriff over Nancy Guthrie case 02:12 UP NEXT Urgent manhunt for special forces veteran who allegedly shot his wife 01:19 U.S. had military security teams on board commercial ships to defend from Iranian attacks 02:06 California takes legal action against State Farm over response to wildfire claims 01:49 Prosecutors say suspect in deadly Palisades fire fixated on Luigi Mangione 01:28 Military father surprises son dressed as school mascot 01:27 Secret Service shoots armed man who fired at officers near White House 01:50 United plane hits lamppost that slams into truck 01:50 Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni reach settlement 00:58 Iran attacks oil tankers in Strait of Hormuz 02:31 Spirit airlines shutdown chaos 01:34 Passengers trapped on board cruise ship amid …

NIH Virologist Vincent Munster Caught Smuggling Deadly Viruses Into U.S., FBI Investigating

NIH Virologist Vincent Munster Caught Smuggling Deadly Viruses Into U.S., FBI Investigating

Authored by Paul D. Thacker via The DisInformation Chronicle, Since the COVID pandemic landed on American shores in early 2020, virologists and allied science writers have engaged in a vociferous propaganda campaign to deny the dangers of virus experiments. When Nature Magazine published a 2021 article minimizing a Wuhan lab accident as the pandemic’s cause, science writer Amy Maxmen quoted Vincent Munster, a virologist at the Rocky Mountain Laboratories, a division of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), in Montana. Munster told Nature’s Maxmen that there was nothing suspicious about a novel coronavirus popping up in the same city as the Wuhan Institute of Virology which was studying coronaviruses. Labs tend to specialize in the specific viruses found around them, Munster explained, and the Wuhan Institute of Virology focuses on coronaviruses because many circulate in China and neighboring countries. “Nine out of ten times, when there’s a new outbreak, you’ll find a lab that will be working on these kinds of viruses nearby,” Munster told Nature. Well, kind of. Sort of. But really not. In …

Kash Patel’s girlfriend lashes out at ‘sick’ report suggesting she was holding another person’s hand after shots rang out at correspondents’ dinner

Kash Patel’s girlfriend lashes out at ‘sick’ report suggesting she was holding another person’s hand after shots rang out at correspondents’ dinner

FBI Director Kash Patel’s girlfriend has lashed out at a report suggesting she held another man’s hand after the shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner. The New York Times published, but later edited, a report suggesting musician Alexis Wilkins was spotted holding hands with someone who wasn’t Patel inside a private holding room after shots rang out at the event, according to the Daily Mail. “I was only ever holding Kash’s hand; anything to suggest otherwise is false. It is sick for the New York Times to have used this time after a perceived active shooting as a political tool. They will stop at nothing to push a narrative out that’s damaging to people they’ve determined they dislike,” Wilkins told the Daily Mail. When reached for comment, a NYT spokesperson told The Independent: “A Times journalist on the scene of the Correspondents’ Dinner accurately reported during the breaking news events of the evening, including Ms. Wilkins’ sheltering in a room while holding a security officer’s hand.” “This reporting was published in a live …

Your Phone Notifications Reveal More Than You Realize. Here’s How to Lock Them Down

Your Phone Notifications Reveal More Than You Realize. Here’s How to Lock Them Down

You may have spotted the recent case of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation pulling Signal messages from a defendant’s iPhone, even though the messages were set to disappear automatically, and the Signal app itself had been deleted from the phone. The trick used by law enforcement? Previews of each incoming Signal message were logged in the notification database kept by iOS. Even though Signal had deleted the conversations, and Signal itself was deleted, this database was still available to the FBI’s forensics teams. There is some good news: Apple has pushed out an iOS 26.4.2 update that makes sure notification logs are properly cleaned up after the notifications have expired. Make sure your iPhone is updated (via General > Software Update) and you should be protected against this type of intrusion. Still, the events are concerning for anyone interested in protecting their own privacy. And even though Apple has improved iOS’s housekeeping, there are steps you can take to further minimize your risk in similar circumstances. What Did the FBI Do? Unsurprisingly, the FBI …

Former FBI director Comey again indicted by US Justice Department | Donald Trump News

Former FBI director Comey again indicted by US Justice Department | Donald Trump News

Trump has long called for the prosecution of Comey, who led an FBI investigation related to the president’s 2016 campaign. Published On 28 Apr 202628 Apr 2026 Former FBI Director James Comey has again been indicted by the United States Department of Justice, this time over a social media post that officials have said constituted a threat to President Donald Trump. The indictment on Tuesday comes after an earlier Justice Department criminal case against Comey fell apart last year. Recommended Stories list of 3 itemsend of list Trump has long called for prosecuting his political opponents, with a particular emphasis on Comey, who oversaw the early days of an investigation into whether Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign had coordinated with Russia. The latest prosecution relates to a social media post by Comey showing a photo of seashells arranged on a beach in the shape of “86 47”. The photo was posted nearly a year ago. The term “86” is typically used in the restaurant industry to refer to throwing something out, although it is sometimes used …

DOJ gets indictment against former FBI director James Comey : NPR

DOJ gets indictment against former FBI director James Comey : NPR

Former Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey leaves the Rayburn House Office Building after testifying on Capitol Hill Dec. 7, 2018, in Washington, D.C. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images The Justice Department has secured a two-count indictment against former FBI Director James Comey for threatening President Trump by posting a photo on social media. This is the second time the Trump DOJ has gotten an indictment against Comey, a fierce critic and outspoken opponent of President Trump. A grand jury handed up an indictment against Comey over a photo he posted online last year of seashells on a North Carolina beach arranged to say “8647” — 86 being old slang to mean “get rid of,” and 47 seen by some as a reference to Trump, who is the 47th (and 45th) president. Comey “did knowingly and willfully make a threat to take the life of, and to inflict bodily harm upon, the President of the United States, in that he publicly posted a photograph on the internet social media …

FBI Spooked By 15 Stolen Crop-Spraying Drones In New Jersey

FBI Spooked By 15 Stolen Crop-Spraying Drones In New Jersey

What has become extraordinarily clear is that nearly every data center, stadium, government building, power plant, substation, and other critical infrastructure site shares one major vulnerability: the lack of a low-cost, early-warning detection layer against one-way attack drones. Additionally, Counter-Unmanned Aircraft Systems (C-UAS) architecture should include a kinetic countermeasure layer designed to defeat threats before impact. Without this layered approach, most critical infrastructure remains highly vulnerable to cheap kamikaze drones. When reports emerge, such as the recent case in New Jersey where 15 crop-spraying drones were reportedly stolen in what investigators described as a sophisticated, coordinated theft, it only reinforces the alarming security concern: these drones, with meaningful payload capacity, can be easily repurposed into weaponized platforms. The national security news outlet The High Side reports that the FBI is worried about the theft of these drones, as experts warn of “ridiculously bad” consequences and “a potential nightmare scenario” if bad actors weaponize these low-cost flying machines. “The bureau is freaked out for a good reason,” Steve Lazarus, a retired FBI agent, told the local outlet. …

The Latest Push to Extend Key US Spy Powers Is Still a Mess

The Latest Push to Extend Key US Spy Powers Is Still a Mess

A senior Democratic aide familiar with the negotiations referred to the section as a “legislative scam,” telling WIRED: “There are many members who don’t quite understand the ins and outs of this law. Tossing the phrase ‘Fourth Amendment requirement’ into the bill is the speaker and the intelligence community working to dupe them into supporting a bill that has no meaningful constitutional safeguards.” Section 5 directs the US attorney general to revoke existing rules on congressional access to the secret court that oversees the 702 program and issue new ones within 60 days. The provision is not self-executing: The access it promises is only as broad as the attorney general chooses to make it. Section 6 is the only provision in the bill with any prospective bite. It strikes language in current law that lets an FBI supervisor, or any employee of equivalent rank, approve a query of the 702 database using an American’s identifier, leaving the decision to an attorney. The same attorneys, however, sit within the class of career employees the administration reclassified …

Kash Patel’s Lawsuit Against The Atlantic Will Likely Fail. That Might Not Be the Point.

Kash Patel’s Lawsuit Against The Atlantic Will Likely Fail. That Might Not Be the Point.

Trump’s only successful outcomes have been a result of extra-legal pressure, not adjudicated merit. In late 2024, Disney agreed to pay $16 million—$15 million of which would go to Trump’s presidential library and an additional $1 million for legal fees—to settle his suit against ABC News and George Stephanopoulos over Stephanopoulos’s repeated statement on This Week that Trump had been found “liable for rape” in the E. Jean Carroll case (Trump had actually been found liable for “sexual abuse”). Paramount Global and CBS News settled another Trump suit for $16 million last July over his assertion that 60 Minutes misleadingly edited an interview with then presidential candidate Kamala Harris to favor her 2024 campaign. In both cases, the lawsuits never went to trial or even the pre-trial discovery phase. The Disney and Paramount settlements with Trump were widely seen as payoffs to prevent a vengeful president from using his power to harm their businesses in the future. Patel’s lawsuit doesn’t seem to have inspired much fear or loathing among Washington journalists mainly because Trump has …