According to journalist Jen Psaki of The Briefing with Jen , Trump’s administration has seized the physical ballots from the 2020 election, all tabulator tapes, and all ballot images from the original ballot count, breaking the line of custody and contaminating the files. Crucially, they also seized all voter rolls from Fulton County. “This is a seismic event,” Senator Jon Ossoff (D-GA) told Psaki. “This should have people across the country absolutely shook. This is a huge deal. This is an FBI raid on the Fulton County elections office.... This is a shot across the bow at the midterm elections. He tried to steal power when he lost it in 2020.” Ossoff warned that Americans must be prepared as Trump tries to take away Americans’ right to choose their elected officials in 2026. On January 6, 2026, Trump explained to Republican lawmakers: “You gotta win the midterms. Because if we don’t win the midterms, it’s just gonna be —I mean, they’ll find a reason to impeach me. I’ll get impeached.”
Ghislaine Maxwell, the accomplice of Jeffrey Epstein, may be serving time in a cushy Texas federal prison, but the convicted child sex trafficker just detonated a political time bomb from behind bars, according to a new Daily Beast report Tuesday. In a recent habeas petition, Maxwell dropped a bombshell claim that four potential "co-conspirators" and "25 men" scored "secret settlements" tied to Epstein's abuse — without facing any indictment. The report said Attorney General Pam Bondi and the Justice Department are doing everything possible to avoid one glaring question: "Who are these men, and why are they still being protected?" The report noted that billionaire Leon Black, a Trump ally and former Apollo CEO, paid $62.5 million to settle Epstein-related claims in the U.S. Virgin Islands. "No criminal charges, just a very large check and a quiet exit," the report said. Black testified in 2018 about being with Trump during a 1990s Russia trip, including allegedly visiting "a strip club together." He paid Epstein roughly $170 million for "tax planning" while denying knowledge of sex trafficking. https://www.rawstory.com/ghislaine-maxwell-2675052422/?cx_testId=15&cx_testVariant=cx_1&cx_artPos=0&cx_experienceId=EXC93HV4HK4I&cx_experienceActionId=showRecommendationsAJJCUYQJELTK26#cxrecs_s
Bruce Springsteen Streets of Minneapolis Full lyrics https://genius.com/Bruce-springsteen-streets-of-minneapolis-lyrics
Precious metals soared Monday — with gold extending its record run past $5,100 per troy ounce and silver surging to new highs — as investors continued to load up on hard assets as a hedge against geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty. 
Gold was up 2.4 percent on New York’s COMEX commodities exchange before pulling back; it had crossed the $5,000 threshold for the first time a day earlier. Silver, which tends to be more volatile, spiked 14.6 percent Monday to more than $116 per ounce before paring back. The white metal has more than tripled in value in the past year. 
Analysts say the run-up in both metals reflects a broader shift away from dollar-based assets, a phenomenon known as the “debasement trade.” https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2026/01/26/gold-silver-record-rally/
From these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion. That we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain. That this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom and that government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth. -- Abraham Lincoln Gettysburg Address #AlexPretti #ReneeGood
The woman who survived five gunshots from a Border Patrol agent in Chicago last fall, -- only to be criminally charged and then cleared, now wants a judge’s permission to share records that show how the feds respond when “their agents use deadly force against U.S. citizens.” #Marimar #Martinez’s lawyer argued Monday that top Trump administration officials continue to smear her name, and that the White House’s false narrative about her arrest has even seeped into writings by Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito. All the while, a standard court order bars Martinez from sharing records in her case. Designed to protect against the improper disclosure of evidence, attorney Chris Parente says the order has instead become “a prophylactic to countering a pernicious misinformation campaign mounted by the United States.” “They are forcing the public, and Supreme Court justices, to have to rely solely on the government’s inaccurate version of events,” Parente wrote. “This court has the power to shed light on the truth of what happened on October 4.”
Senate offices are closed today, but you can email your senators and demand that they use their vote later this week to rein in ICE and CBP death squads:
The Minnesota Department of Corrections (DOC) names Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino directly in a statement: "In the hours following the shooting, U.S. Border Patrol Chief Gregory Bovino held a press conference asserting that the operation was targeting an individual named Jose Huerta-Chuma and characterized him as having a significant criminal history. Because federal statements have repeatedly included inaccurate information about Minnesota custody and criminal records, the DOC reviewed available records to determine whether the individual referenced had any connection to Minnesota state prison custody.  Based on DOC records and publicly available Minnesota court data:  The individual identified by federal officials has never been in Minnesota DOC custody. DOC and court records show no felony commitments associated with this Public Minnesota court records reflect only misdemeanor-level traffic offenses from more than a decade ago. The individual is not currently under DOC supervision." On its website, the DOC mentions other statistics it claims federal officials have been inaccurate about.  "The United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) continues to release false numbers about ICE detainers in Minnesota. The Minnesota Department of Corrections (DOC) has provided verified data and requested clarification. DHS has not responded," according to the DOC.  A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told the AP Pretti was armed with a handgun, but several angles of the incident appear to show multiple agents striking him repeatedly on the ground and securing a handgun moments before Pretti was killed.
The Department of Homeland Security has ordered immigration officers to gather identifying information about anyone filming them and to “send that information to Intel who will do a ‘work-up’ on them,” a federal law enforcement official directly involved tells me. “Meaning, trying to identify them via social media, running their license plates if available, and running a criminal history check,” the official explained. The directive is part of a sweeping, nationwide effort by U.S. immigration authorities to identify anyone and everyone trying to film their conduct. This includes not just ICE but other Department of Homeland Security agencies like Border Patrol as well. The ultimate goal is to create a list of anti-ICE protestors, which the Trump administration believes are part of an organized network of domestic terrorists. A loose-lipped ICE agent in Portland, Maine publicly hinted at the effort in an exchange on Friday that was captured on video. The video shows the ICE agent taking pictures of a car belonging to a woman who had been recording him, prompting her to ask why. The ICE agent replies: “‘Cause we have a nice little database and now you’re considered a domestic terrorist. So have fun with that.” The remark wasn’t just bravado or trolling. In addition to what my own sources at DHS are telling me, David Bier, Director of Immigration Studies at the Cato Institute, published a report last month pulling together reams of incidents similar to the one in Portland. The report concludes that DHS has a formal policy of intimidating people trying to film them on the dubious legal grounds that doing so amounts to impeding federal enforcement. “DHS has a systematic policy of threatening people who follow ICE or DHS agents to record their activities,” the report says. But the policy goes farther than just deterring people from filming ICE. As my source explained to me, the Department of Homeland Security is moving to collect intelligence on and watchlist protesters. Asked about the purpose of DHS policy of filming the ICE filmers, Bier told me that the information are being fed into databases for possible future law enforcement action. “ICE agents film arrests both to feed the DHS social media blitz and to identify them,” Bier told me. “They upload information to their databases and see if they have outstanding warrants or are here illegally.” The practice can also be seen in the killing of Renee Good in Minneapolis earlier this month. Video of the incident shows ICE Agent Jonathan Ross holding up a phone and filming Good in her vehicle shortly before the shooting.