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  • How Israel could react to U.S. strikes on Iran

    How Israel could react to U.S. strikes on Iran


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    • Special Report: President Trump delivers remarks on Iran strikes

      59:41

    • U.S. Navy subs launched 30 Tomahawk missiles as part of Iran attack

      03:12

    • Iran retaliation a growing concern in the U.S. after strikes 

      02:44

    • Ocasio-Cortez says Trump Iran strikes ‘grounds for impeachment’

      03:03

    • Trump says Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities ‘completely and totally obliterated’ in U.S. strikes

      03:36

    • Netanyahu praises Trump’s strikes on Iran

      01:53

    • Trump calls strikes on Iran a ‘complete and total success’

      02:27

    • Now Playing

      How Israel could react to U.S. strikes on Iran

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    • UP NEXT

      What we know about the U.S strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      06:59

    • Highly-enriched uranium held in Iran sites hit by U.S. strikes

      03:50

    • Special Report: Trump says U.S. attacked Iran nuclear sites

      06:38

    • What led to the U.S. strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      04:48

    • Israel-Iran conflict escalates with new strikes

      02:10

    • Trump meets with national security team as B-2 bombers head to Guam

      01:49

    • American-Iranians worry about safety of loved ones as communication becomes harder

      04:23

    • Americans in Israel flee country after strikes forced flights to stop

      02:24

    • Iranian missile strike sparks fire and damages apartment buildings

      00:49

    • Killing Iran’s leader would ‘open Pandora’s box,’ Russia says

      00:46

    • Iranian missile strikes hospital in Israel

      02:07

    • Netanyahu visits hospital damaged in Iranian strike

      01:20

    NBC News NOW

    NBC News’ Matt Bradley talks about what the reaction from Israel could look like after President Trump announced the U.S. strikes on nuclear sites in Iran. 

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  • Watch President Trump’s full speech after U.S. strikes nuclear sites in Iran

    Watch President Trump’s full speech after U.S. strikes nuclear sites in Iran


    IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

    • Special Report: President Trump delivers remarks on Iran strikes

      59:41

    • U.S. Navy subs launched 30 Tomahawk missiles as part of Iran attack

      03:12

    • Iran retaliation a growing concern in the U.S. after strikes 

      02:44

    • Ocasio-Cortez says Trump Iran strikes ‘grounds for impeachment’

      03:03

    • Now Playing

      Trump says Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities ‘completely and totally obliterated’ in U.S. strikes

      03:36

    • UP NEXT

      Netanyahu praises Trump’s strikes on Iran

      01:53

    • Trump calls strikes on Iran a ‘complete and total success’

      02:27

    • How Israel could react to U.S. strikes on Iran

      06:58

    • What we know about the U.S strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      06:59

    • Highly-enriched uranium held in Iran sites hit by U.S. strikes

      03:50

    • Special Report: Trump says U.S. attacked Iran nuclear sites

      06:38

    • What led to the U.S. strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      04:48

    • Israel-Iran conflict escalates with new strikes

      02:10

    • Trump meets with national security team as B-2 bombers head to Guam

      01:49

    • American-Iranians worry about safety of loved ones as communication becomes harder

      04:23

    • Americans in Israel flee country after strikes forced flights to stop

      02:24

    • Iranian missile strike sparks fire and damages apartment buildings

      00:49

    • Killing Iran’s leader would ‘open Pandora’s box,’ Russia says

      00:46

    • Iranian missile strikes hospital in Israel

      02:07

    • Netanyahu visits hospital damaged in Iranian strike

      01:20

    NBC News NOW

    President Trump delivered remarks after strikes on three nuclear facilities in Iran, saying “Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace” and threatened further action.

    Nightly News Netcast

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  • Legality of Trump Iran strikes questioned by some lawmakers in both parties

    Legality of Trump Iran strikes questioned by some lawmakers in both parties



    WASHINGTON — Several members of Congress in both parties Saturday questioned the legality of President Donald Trump’s move to launch military strikes on Iran.

    While Republican leaders and many rank-and-file members stood by Trump’s decision to bomb Iran’s major nuclear enrichment facilities, at least two GOP lawmakers joined Democrats across the party spectrum in suggesting it was unconstitutional for him to bomb Iran without approval from Congress.

    “While President Trump’s decision may prove just, it’s hard to conceive a rationale that’s Constitutional,” Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, who usually aligns with Trump, said on X. “I look forward to his remarks tonight.”

    Follow along for live coverage

    Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., said in response to Trump’s social media post announcing the strikes: “This is not Constitutional.”

    Massie introduced a bipartisan resolution this week seeking to block U.S. military action against Iran “unless explicitly authorized by a declaration of war or specific authorization for use of military force against Iran” passed by Congress.

    In brief remarks from the White House on Saturday night, Trump defended the strikes but did not mention the basis of his legal authority to launch them without Congress’ having given him that power.

    Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., reacted in real time during a speech in Tulsa, Oklahoma, slamming Trump’s actions as “grossly unconstitutional.”

    “The only entity that can take this country to war is the U.S. Congress. The president does not have the right,” Sanders told the crowd, which broke out in “no more war!” chants.

    Some Democrats called it an impeachable offense for the president to bomb Iran without approval from Congress.

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., said Trump’s move is “absolutely and clearly grounds for impeachment.”

    “The President’s disastrous decision to bomb Iran without authorization is a grave violation of the Constitution and Congressional War Powers,” she said on X. “He has impulsively risked launching a war that may ensnare us for generations.”

    Rep. Sean Casten, D-Ill., said on social media: “This is not about the merits of Iran’s nuclear program. No president has the authority to bomb another country that does not pose an imminent threat to the US without the approval of Congress. This is an unambiguous impeachable offense.”

    Casten called on House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., to “grow a spine” and protect the war powers reserved for Congress.

    Johnson said Trump respects the Constitution as he sought to lay the groundwork to defend his decision to act unilaterally.

    “The President fully respects the Article I power of Congress, and tonight’s necessary, limited, and targeted strike follows the history and tradition of similar military actions under presidents of both parties,” he said in a statement.

    Johnson’s remarks, along with support for Trump’s move offered by Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., indicate that Trump may have sufficient political cover to avoid blowback from the Republican-controlled Congress.

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said Trump “failed to seek congressional authorization for the use of military force and risks American entanglement in a potentially disastrous war in the Middle East.” But he stopped short of labeling the military action illegal or unconstitutional.

    House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., was more direct on the legal question.

    “The power to declare war resides solely with Congress. Donald Trump’s unilateral decision to attack Iran is unauthorized and unconstitutional,” said Clark, the No. 2 Democrat. “In doing so, the President has exposed our military and diplomatic personnel in the region to the risk of further escalation.”

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., responded by endorsing a resolution by Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., to require congressional approval for Trump to take military action in Iran.

    “No president should be allowed to unilaterally march this nation into something as consequential as war with erratic threats and no strategy,” Schumer said in a statement. “We must enforce the War Powers Act, and I’m urging Leader Thune to put it on the Senate floor immediately. I am voting for it and implore all Senators on both sides of the aisle to vote for it.”

    Appearing Saturday night on MSNBC, Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., who co-authored the resolution with Massie, wondered whether the anti-war voters who support Trump would back his move.

    “This is the first true crack in the MAGA base,” he said, noting that Trump’s rise in the 2016 primaries was aided by his move to slam President George W. Bush for the Iraq war.



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  • MAGA influencers fall in line behind Trump after airstrikes hit Iran

    MAGA influencers fall in line behind Trump after airstrikes hit Iran



    The MAGA movement’s top influencers were divided over bombing Iran until President Donald Trump did just that Saturday night.

    Now, at least for the time being, the lay leaders in the president’s base appear to be rallying around a position that spares Trump criticism: Direct attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities are justified, as long as American troops aren’t sent into a third full war halfway around the world in the last quarter of a century.

    “People don’t want an escalation where ground troops are sent in, but this is not Iraq,” said Ryan Girdusky, a Republican consultant who worked for a super PAC that backed Vice President JD Vance’s 2022 Senate campaign in Ohio. Girdusky predicted the MAGA base will swing in line behind Trump.

    There is little appetite at the White House or anywhere else in Washington for a ground invasion of Iran, a mountainous country in the Middle East that would be extraordinarily difficult to conquer in a conventional war.

    But it’s hardly unusual for the start of hostilities — the airstrikes on three Iranian nuclear-enrichment facilities were the first direct American intervention in a week-old war between Israel and Iran — to create a rally-around-the-flag effect within a president’s party. What’s notable is just how dramatic and speedy the turn has been from dissent to full-throated support.

    “Heavy smear campaign going on right now attacking America First Patriots as ‘Isolationists,’” Jack Posobiec, a leading voice in the MAGA movement, posted earlier Saturday, before the bombings. “I hope everyone using this bad persuasion knows that it associate them with the worst Bush-era neocons,” slang for the so-called neoconservative George W. Bush administration officials who pushed for war in Iraq.

    Posobiec had previously warned that direct attacks on Iran would “disastrously split the Trump coalition.”

    But after the airstrikes, he posted what looked like a sentiment of approval.

    “President Trump has clearly signaled, as he has all along, that he opposes a regime change war in Iran,” he wrote. “This is about the nuclear program of Iran which he promised he would end from day one.”

    Posobiec was hardly alone among anti-interventionist MAGA figures in holding off on criticizing Trump after what he described as a highly successful mission that “completely and totally obliterated” Iran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons.

    Steve Bannon, a top adviser in Trump’s first White House and host of the “War Room” podcast, made it clear in a special broadcast Saturday night that he would have preferred for Israel to take the lead in striking Iran’s nuclear facilities. But he stopped short of condemning Trump for sending U.S. forces to do the job.

    Instead he gave voice to the doubts some MAGA voters would have about the mission.

    “A big question is going to be why Israel did not take the lead and do this. Because right now this is back to the United States,” he said. “Why are we engaging in combat operations in a war that’s a war of choice?”

    But he ultimately concluded that Trump would bring the MAGA movement to his own position — perhaps an indication that influencers have more to lose by opposing Trump than he does by using force in Iran.

    “There are a lot of MAGA that are not happy about this,” Bannon said. “I believe he will get MAGA on board for all of it. But he’s got to explain exactly and go through this.”

    An hour after Trump addressed the nation from the White House, Tucker Carlson, the most prominent anti-strike Trump ally, had said nothing to his 16.4 million followers on X.

    But Charlie Kirk, a co-founder of Turning Point USA, a pro-Trump coalition of younger conservatives, had abandoned his long-running skepticism about the wisdom of hitting Iran.

    “America stands with President Trump,” Kirk wrote on X.

    While Democrats pushed back against Trump, over both the wisdom of the strikes and the constitutionality of attacking another sovereign country without either congressional authorization or an imminent threat to the United States, most Republicans voiced approval or met the decision with silence.

    One anomaly: Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., who had been working with Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., on a measure designed to prohibit Trump from using force against Iran.

    This is not Constitutional,” Massie wrote on X.



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  • Yacht crashes into Hudson River harbor, injuring dozens

    Yacht crashes into Hudson River harbor, injuring dozens



    Dozens of people suffered minor injuries Saturday afternoon when a yacht carrying 352 passengers crashed into a pier on the Hudson River in New York City, authorities said.

    Some reports suggested the yacht was hosting a party when the crash took place at Henry Hudson Parkway and 125th Street in Manhattan shortly after 4 p.m. NBC News was not immediately able to verify the nature of the event onboard.

    Thirty-five people were taken to three hospitals with non-life-threatening injuries following the crash, the fire department said.

    A cause was not immediately clear.

    The remaining passengers disembarked without incident, according to the New York Fire Department.



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  • Iran retaliation a growing concern in the U.S. after strikes

    Iran retaliation a growing concern in the U.S. after strikes


    IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

    • Special Report: President Trump delivers remarks on Iran strikes

      59:41

    • U.S. Navy subs launched 30 Tomahawk missiles as part of Iran attack

      03:12

    • Now Playing

      Iran retaliation a growing concern in the U.S. after strikes 

      02:44

    • UP NEXT

      Trump says Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities ‘completely and totally obliterated’ in U.S. strikes

      03:36

    • Netanyahu praises Trump’s strikes on Iran

      01:53

    • Trump calls strikes on Iran a ‘complete and total success’

      02:27

    • How Israel could react to U.S. strikes on Iran

      06:58

    • What we know about the U.S strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      06:59

    • Highly-enriched uranium held in Iran sites hit by U.S. strikes

      03:50

    • Special Report: Trump says U.S. attacked Iran nuclear sites

      06:38

    • What led to the U.S. strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      04:48

    • Israel-Iran conflict escalates with new strikes

      02:10

    • Trump meets with national security team as B-2 bombers head to Guam

      01:49

    • American-Iranians worry about safety of loved ones as communication becomes harder

      04:23

    • Americans in Israel flee country after strikes forced flights to stop

      02:24

    • Iranian missile strike sparks fire and damages apartment buildings

      00:49

    • Killing Iran’s leader would ‘open Pandora’s box,’ Russia says

      00:46

    • Iranian missile strikes hospital in Israel

      02:07

    • Netanyahu visits hospital damaged in Iranian strike

      01:20

    • Israel has been ‘crying wolf for 20 years,’ lawmaker says

      05:25

    Concerns about a potential retaliation from Iran are growing after President Trump revealed that the U.S. attacked three nuclear sites in the country. NBC News’ Hallie Jackson discusses how Americans are reacting to the strikes. 

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  • Trump calls strikes on Iran a ‘complete and total success’

    Trump calls strikes on Iran a ‘complete and total success’


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    • Trump says Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities ‘completely and totally obliterated’ in U.S. strikes

      03:36

    • Netanyahu praises Trump’s strikes on Iran

      01:53

    • Now Playing

      Trump calls strikes on Iran a ‘complete and total success’

      02:27

    • UP NEXT

      How Israel could react to U.S. strikes on Iran

      06:58

    • What we know about the U.S strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      06:59

    • Highly-enriched uranium held in Iran sites hit by U.S. strikes

      03:50

    • Special Report: Trump says U.S. attacked Iran nuclear sites

      06:38

    • What led to the U.S. strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      04:48

    • Israel-Iran conflict escalates with new strikes

      02:10

    • Trump meets with national security team as B-2 bombers head to Guam

      01:49

    • American-Iranians worry about safety of loved ones as communication becomes harder

      04:23

    • Americans in Israel flee country after strikes forced flights to stop

      02:24

    • Iranian missile strike sparks fire and damages apartment buildings

      00:49

    • Killing Iran’s leader would ‘open Pandora’s box,’ Russia says

      00:46

    • Iranian missile strikes hospital in Israel

      02:07

    • Netanyahu visits hospital damaged in Iranian strike

      01:20

    • Israel has been ‘crying wolf for 20 years,’ lawmaker says

      05:25

    • Iranian missile strikes Tel Aviv high rise building

      00:59

    • Trump on potential Iran strike: ‘I may do it. I may not do it.’

      03:23

    • Netanyahu thanks Trump for U.S. support over Iran strikes

      00:57

    NBC News NOW

    Moderator of “Meet the Press” Kristen Welker shares details of her phone conversation with President Trump after he ordered strikes on three nuclear sites in Iran, reportedly calling it a “great success.”



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  • Highly-enriched uranium held in Iran sites hit by U.S. strikes

    Highly-enriched uranium held in Iran sites hit by U.S. strikes


    IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

    • How Israel could react to U.S. strikes on Iran

      06:58

    • What we know about the U.S strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      06:59

    • Now Playing

      Highly-enriched uranium held in Iran sites hit by U.S. strikes

      03:50

    • UP NEXT

      Special Report: Trump says U.S. attacked Iran nuclear sites

      06:38

    • What led to the U.S. strikes on Iran nuclear sites

      04:48

    • Israel-Iran conflict escalates with new strikes

      02:10

    • Trump meets with national security team as B-2 bombers head to Guam

      01:49

    • American-Iranians worry about safety of loved ones as communication becomes harder

      04:23

    • Americans in Israel flee country after strikes forced flights to stop

      02:24

    • Iranian missile strike sparks fire and damages apartment buildings

      00:49

    • Killing Iran’s leader would ‘open Pandora’s box,’ Russia says

      00:46

    • Iranian missile strikes hospital in Israel

      02:07

    • Netanyahu visits hospital damaged in Iranian strike

      01:20

    • Israel has been ‘crying wolf for 20 years,’ lawmaker says

      05:25

    • Iranian missile strikes Tel Aviv high rise building

      00:59

    • Trump on potential Iran strike: ‘I may do it. I may not do it.’

      03:23

    • Netanyahu thanks Trump for U.S. support over Iran strikes

      00:57

    • Israeli ambassador says Trump ‘will support our efforts’ against Iran

      21:40

    • ‘Surrender to what?’: Khamenei defiant in response to Trump

      01:06

    • Trump weighs range of options for U.S. response in Iran

      05:48

    NBC News NOW

    NBC News’ Richard Engel explains what operations take place in the three nuclear sites in Iran that have been hit by U.S. strikes.



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  • U.S. strikes Iranian nuclear sites, Trump says

    U.S. strikes Iranian nuclear sites, Trump says


    The United States bombed multiple nuclear sites in Iran, President Donald Trump announced in a social media post on Saturday. The airstrikes are the first time the United States has conducted a direct military attack on Iran, and they further escalated a military conflict between Iran and Israel that began on June 13.

    “We have completed our very successful attack on the three Nuclear sites in Iran, including Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan,” Trump said in a social media post. “All planes are now outside of Iran air space. A full payload of BOMBS was dropped on the primary site, Fordow. All planes are safely on their way home.”

    Trump added, “Congratulations to our great American Warriors. There is not another military in the World that could have done this. NOW IS THE TIME FOR PEACE! Thank you for your attention to this matter.”

    Israel was able to hit some of Iran’s nuclear facilities on its own, but it is not believed to be able to strike a key site at Fordo, which is believed to hold enriched uranium and centrifuges. The facility at Fordo, Iran’s most advanced, is built inside a mountain and believed to be safe from any bomb except for the United States’ GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP), a “bunker buster” weapon.

    Trump did not says what types of bombs were used in the strikes. Though the United States has provided Israel with other bunker busters, Israel is not known to have any plane capable of delivering the MOP, making U.S. participation necessary for any successful airstrike on Fordo.

    According to Israeli officials, its attacks have killed several of Iran’s top military commanders, along with at least nine scientists working on nuclear enrichment, and it has damaged several nuclear enrichment facilities.

    Israel was able to conduct its initial strikes mostly with its own intelligence and forces, but it leaned heavily on U.S. intelligence, as well as U.S. munitions and defense systems that Washington had previously provided when Iran launched retaliatory strikes on Israel.

    Two U.S. officials told NBC News this week that the United States used ground-based interceptors and ships to defend Israel against Iranian missiles.

    Trump’s shift

    NBC News has reported that President Trump initially opposed Israeli military action against Iran, favoring negotiations over bombing. But in the days before Israel’s strikes on Iran, he became convinced that Israel’s heightened anxiety over Iran’s nuclear enrichment capabilities was warranted.

    After a pivotal June 8 briefing from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Air Force Gen. Dan Caine, about Israel’s plans and U.S. options for supporting its operation, Trump gave tacit approval to Israel to conduct strikes and decided to provide limited U.S. backing.

    Even though many of his MAGA allies have been advocating against U.S. military involvement, Trump’s rhetoric about Iran has steadily escalated since Israel’s campaign began.

    Image: G7 Leaders' Summit donald trump politics political politician
    President Donald Trump meets reporters after he signed a trade agreement with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer at the Group of Seven summit in Kananaskis, Alberta, on Monday.Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    On Tuesday, in a post on his social media platform Truth Social, he called for Iran’s “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!”

    Wednesday morning, he said he was still considering U.S. strikes.

    “I may do it. I may not do it,” he told reporters outside the White House. “Nobody knows what I’m going to do.”

    Asked what he meant with his “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!” post, he said, “That means I’ve had it. OK, I’ve had it. I give up. No more.”

    “Then we go blow up all the, you know, all the nuclear stuff that’s all over the place there,” he added.

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.



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  • Minnesota lobbyist arrested after allegedly sending threatening texts

    Minnesota lobbyist arrested after allegedly sending threatening texts



    A longtime Minnesota lobbyist was charged Friday after allegedly making violent threats ”with the purpose to terrorize another” person, according to court documents.

    Jonathan M. Bohn, 41, is believed to have committed “threats of violence — reckless disregard” after sending a series of threatening text messages. The charge, a felony, carries a maximum penalty of up to a five-year prison sentence or a $10,000 fine or both.

    While the court document, filed in the First Judicial District of Carver County, does not include the name of the person Bohn, a lobbyist for 20 years, reportedly sent the texts to, it does include samples of several texts threatening in nature.

    In one message, Bohn allegedly wrote in part, “… Today I bought 500 bullets. I can’t wait to shoot one of you motherf—— in the face.”

    In another message he wrote, “Excited to have my gun at the Capitol and blow somebody’s f—— face off.”

    On Friday, a judge in Chaska, Minn., set Bohn’s bail at $1 million and ordered that he have no contact with the person he made the threatening comments to. The judge also ordered that Bohn must stay a half-mile away from the Capitol complex.

    It is believed that Bohn’s sent the flurry of threatening texts on Wednesday. Court documents suggest he was allegedly spurred on after seeing a friend post an image of President Donald Trump as a king. It appears the friend changed the image ahead of the June 14 “No Kings Day” march, a protest against Trump, according to NBC News affiliate KARE 11. Earlier on June 14, Minnesota Rep. Melissa Hortman, the former state House speaker, and her husband, Mark Hortman, were shot and killed in their homes. State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, were also shot in their homes. John Hoffman, who was shot nine times, is in critical but stable condition.

    Despite Bohn’s series of erratic text messages, the person who received them did not respond to Bohn, according to court documents.

    During a search of Bohn’s home, police found a gun but no ammunition.

    As he sat in court on Friday, Bohn wept through the proceedings. He later released a statement from jail.

    “Earlier this week, I was grieving the horrific acts of violence committed against my friends and colleagues,” he said. “In the midst of this immense grief, I sent a series of heated and emotional texts to a friend of nearly thirteen years — someone with whom I’ve shared countless candid and passionate political conversations. In that moment of anguish, I used language that I deeply regret. The words were spoken from pain, not from intent. I am a hurting person, not a violent one.”

    He went on to say that he is not a violent person.

    “I am profoundly sorry that my words have created a distraction during this time of collective mourning. This moment demands unity, compassion, and reflection — and I am committed to being part of that healing.”

    As his case moves through the court system, Bohn is on administrative leave from Inter Faculty Organization (IFO), which represents the needs of seven Minnesota state universities.

    “We are monitoring developments closely, cooperating as needed with law enforcement and will continue to keep our members informed.” said IFO president Jenna Chernega in a statement to KARE 11.

    Bohn’s next court date is Aug. 27.



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