"Li," from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi, saying, "And the partial government shut do...
on. A short time ago, House Speaker Mike Johnson announced that fellow Republicans will
“not accept the bill the U.S. Senate passed early this morning to exclude immigration”
and customs enforcement from Department of Homeland Security funding. Democrats have opposed reopening DHS unless specific changes were made in ICE tactics. No DHS money, means transportation security administration workers have had to work without pay for weeks." Speaker Johnson Promise help is on the way. President Trump has already ordered by executive order that TSA agents will be paid and those that machinery is in process right now, the off-sum
management budget is working through that to make sure that that happens and we will reduce the lines and the weights of the airlines. Johnson says the House will present a continuing resolution to fund DHS through May 22nd and send that to the Senate. The package, the GOP led Senate pass this morning with fund DHS through September. Hundreds of migrants have been arrested at immigration courts as part of President Trump's aggressive crackdown on illegal and
“legal migration. This week, Justice Department lawyers admitted they used erroneous information”
when defending arrests ICE agents who have made at immigration court houses. NPR said heo Martinis Patron has a latest. In a letter to a New York federal judge that DOJ considered a 2025 ICE memo cited in court to defend the agency's arrest in court houses does not apply to immigration courts. The DOJ said in its letter the memo does not and has
never applied to civil immigration enforcement actions in or near immigration courts. The agency
blamed ICE for their mistake. This is the latest development of a lawsuit brought by the New York City-based immigrant advocacy organizations, African communities together and the door. The ACLU of New York says the admission by defense has implications that are far reaching. However, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security says the agency will continue to arrest undocumented immigrants at immigration courts following their proceedings.
Said heo Martinis Beltran and PR news.
“Any raw, leaked cyber group says it has hacked FBI Director Cash Patel and”
posted photos of him online. The FBI says it's aware and has taken steps to mitigate any potential risks. Here's NPR's Ryan Lucas. The hacking group on Dallas says in a message posted online that FBI Director Cash Patel now finds his name among the list of hacking victims. The group also posted photos of Patel including several of him smoking a cigar in others with what appear to be friends or family. In a statement the FBI says malicious
actors targeted Patel's personal email information that says the material in question is historical in nature and involves no government information. It also says the Hondala hack team has frequently targeted U.S. government officials. The State Department has offered up to
$10 million for information leading to the identification of the group. Ryan Lucas and PR news,
Washington. It's NPR. Jeffrey Epstein's accusers are suing the Justice Department and Google. The class action lawsuit filed in California claims their private information is spreading after the government released thousands of unredacted files containing information about the late financier, sex crimes, charges and associations. Resent PR's Kristen Wright. The group of Epstein survivors says the Justice Department
publicly shared personally identifiable information without permission. The files included full names, images, contact information and where they live. DOJ said last month it's fixing the redaction errors but the federal complaint to ledges Google is continuously republishing the information through its search engine and AI search tool. The survivors say they're getting calls, emails and threats from strangers. They must prove among other things that the information was
not of legitimate public concern. They argue while there is public interest in the Epstein case, the publication of their individual information by Google doesn't meet that privacy law standard. The survivors are asking the court to order the tech giant to remove the information. They're also seeking damages from DOJ and a jury trial. Kristen Wright and PR news, Washington. The former president of Priscilla Jaiir, Bolsonaro, is now serving at a 27-year
sentence for a coup attempt. Under House arrest, the country Supreme Court approved the form of his confinement from the grounds of a penitentiary to his residence in an upscale gated community citing Bolsonaro's failing health. This 71-year-old was hospitalized two weeks ago for pneumonia. He was discharged today. His home confinement could be reviewed in 90 days. This is NPR News. [BLANK_AUDIO]


