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  • Judge dismisses countersuit against Blake Lively

    Judge dismisses countersuit against Blake Lively


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    • Massive new protests against ICE immigration operations in LA

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    • Tensions rise as Trump deploys National Guard amid L.A. protests

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    • At least 22 injured after boat fire near the Bronx

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    • New Trump travel ban set to go into effect

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    • At least 2 people killed as storms push through South

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    • Multiple people injured after skydiving plane crash in Tennessee

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    • California Democrats blast Trump’s decision to deploy National Guard

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    • Trump: Elon Musk will face ‘very serious consequences’ if he funds Democratic candidates

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    • Tensions grow in L.A. amid protests over immigration operations

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    Nightly News

    A federal judge dismissed charges of defamation and civil extortion filed by director and actor Justin Baldoni against his former co-star Blake Lively. Baldoni was asking for at least $400 million in damages. His legal team did not respond to NBC News for comment. Lively’s team today saying she’s been vindicated. NBC News’ Sam Brock has more. 



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  • Reporter falls back with dispersed L.A. protesters amid flash-bangs, tear gas

    Reporter falls back with dispersed L.A. protesters amid flash-bangs, tear gas


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    • Police deploy tear gas, flash-bangs after unlawful assembly declared in L.A.

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    • L.A. mayor suggests city may be a ‘test case’ for increased federal authority

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      Reporter falls back with dispersed L.A. protesters amid flash-bangs, tear gas

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      L.A. schools will have ‘perimeter of safety around graduation sites’

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    • Protester urges L.A. crowd not to ‘give Donald Trump what he wants’

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    • Massive new protests against ICE immigration operations in LA

      04:20

    • Los Angeles protester: ICE is ‘terrorizing our families for no reason’

      02:03

    • Marines mobilized to base near L.A. to support National Guard during ICE protests

      04:32

    • Rabbi at Los Angeles anti-ICE protest ‘saddened’ to hear Marines are mobilizing

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    • Los Angeles braces for fourth day of anti-ICE protests

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    • ‘I would do it’: Trump voices support for arresting Newsom

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    • Waymo cars go up in flames during Los Angeles anti-ICE protests

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    • California Democrats blast Trump’s decision to deploy National Guard

      01:55

    • Gas station looted, car set on fire in anti-ICE protests

      00:51

    • Border czar says top California officials could get arrested if they impede raids

      03:43

    • Trump to Deploy National Guard in LA Amid ICE Protests

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    • Tensions grow in L.A. amid protests over immigration operations

      01:37

    • Dozens detained in L.A. ICE raids, sparking protests and outrage

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    • Abrego Garcia charged with human smuggling

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    • Examining the details of the federal criminal indictment against Abrego Garcia

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    NBC News NOW

    NBC News’ Gadi Schwartz reports from the anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles where authorities are working to disperse crowds. Officials fired tear gas and flash-bangs to move the demonstrators. 

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  • U.S. says it has arrested another Chinese researcher accused of smuggling biological material

    U.S. says it has arrested another Chinese researcher accused of smuggling biological material


    U.S. authorities said Monday that they had arrested a Chinese researcher accused of smuggling biological material into the country, the second such case in days.

    The FBI said in a criminal complaint that the researcher, identified as Chengxuan Han, a Chinese doctoral student at the College of Life Science and Technology at the Huazhong University of Science and Technology in Wuhan, was arrested Sunday at the airport in Detroit.

    According to the complaint, since September, Han has sent four shipments from China containing concealed biological material to staff members at a laboratory at the University of Michigan, where she planned to spend a year completing a project. Officials said Han made false statements about the shipments when federal agents questioned her about them when she arrived in the United States from Shanghai.

    Two Chinese nationals were charged last week after the FBI said it had been determined that one tried to smuggle a toxic fungus into the United States, also for research at the University of Michigan, it alleged. One, a researcher at the university, was arrested and remains in custody, while the other was denied entry to the United States last year and remains at large.

    According to the complaint, the biological material Han is accused of smuggling — sometimes hidden between pages of a book — is related to roundworms and requires a government permit.

    “It doesn’t strike me as something that is dangerous in any way. But there are rules to ship biological material,” Michael Shapira, a biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, who read the court filing, told The Associated Press.

    The complaint also alleges that Han deleted the contents of her electronic device three days before she arrived in Detroit.

    “Han stated she deleted the content to ‘start fresh’ while she was in the United States,” it says.

    Han is in custody ahead of a bond hearing Wednesday.

    The Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment outside business hours.

    With regard to the two Chinese nationals who were previously charged, a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry said last week that he was not aware of the situation but that the Chinese government “has always required Chinese citizens overseas to strictly abide by local laws and regulations, while also safeguarding their legitimate rights and interests in accordance with the law.”

    The University of Michigan also did not immediately reply to a request for comment Monday outside business hours.

    In a statement in response to the case last week, the university said it was cooperating with federal law enforcement and that it strongly condemned “any actions that seek to cause harm, threaten national security or undermine the university’s critical public mission.”



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  • Trump administration leans into California protests

    Trump administration leans into California protests



    President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda has met a groundswell of opposition in Los Angeles, the country’s second-largest city.

    At least 56 people have been arrested so far in massive protests against the administration’s immigration raids in the city Friday. The demonstrations have spilled over onto one of the region’s largest freeways, and federal authorities are facing criticism after they arrested, and apparently injured, a prominent labor leader.

    In response, the White House has threatened to arrest California’s governor and mobilized Marines to support National Guard troops in defending federal property — even though state officials say they don’t want the assistance and are now suing the administration.

    For the White House, this scene — Trump battling a blue state over his signature issue — is a political win, officials said. It’s a nationally watched saga of the sort that has long defined his career: a made-for-TV moment.

    “We’re happy to have this fight,” a White House official said, emphasizing that politically, the administration sees it as a winning issue.

    Democrats and immigration activists have broadly blasted the Los Angeles operation as illegal and inhumane and insisted that it’s all about politics — and not about sound public policy.

    “This Administration’s actions are not about public safety — they’re about stoking fear,” former Vice President Kamala Harris, a Los Angeles resident who ran against Trump last year, wrote in a statement.

    But Trump allies argue that it’s simply Trump carrying out the hard-line immigration agenda that was the centerpiece of his campaign. NBC News spoke with four White House officials, in addition to other Trump supporters, who requested anonymity to speak candidly.

    “This is what America voted for, period,” a Trump adviser said. “This is the America First focus that got the president elected and is driven by nothing else than what he promised American voters.”

    “Look at the violence, the attacks on law enforcement,” the adviser added. “If Democrats want to support that, let them. This is why we win elections and they do not.”

    Trump advisers also pointed to the fact that the president’s immigration policies continue to get high marks in most public polling.

    A CBS/YouGov poll conducted just before the Los Angeles immigration raids found that 54% of respondents approved of the administration’s “program to deport immigrants illegally.”

    Those numbers help clarify why the administration and more broadly congressional Republicans are politically comfortable leaning into support of the raids over vocal opposition from critics — and a persistent threat of legal challenge.

    “I know there’s no question places like California have thumbed their nose at the American people and decided they want to be a sanctuary for criminals,” Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., said Monday, adding, “I think he’s exercising exactly what he said he’d do and what people elected him” to do.

    Trump advisers say the president also points to the fact that he got more votes in California in 2024 than in his previous campaigns, even though he still badly lost the heavily Democratic-leaning state.

    The administration’s response to the protests does seem to have one eye on the reaction in conservative media, a space increasingly dominated by pro-Trump influencers.

    Some of those influencers have been posting from the protests — most notably Phil McGraw, a well-known Trump supporter better known as “Dr. Phil,” who embedded with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents during the Los Angeles raids, as he did during similar immigration raids in Chicago this year.

    The Trump adviser, asked about McGraw’s involvement, said: “This is an important moment in American history. People have a right to see it in a way not unfairly skewed by a biased mainstream media.”

    The adviser wouldn’t elaborate on how McGraw, whose presence was first reported by CNN, was able to have front-line access to the federal immigration operations. A spokesman for McGraw didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    Republicans more broadly also see the fight as a political winner and say Democrats are functionally taking the bait on an issue in which polling has given Trump an advantage.

    “I think it is a symptom of how far left this party has done when you have major Democrats standing on the side of illegal aliens that are torching vehicles,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis told Fox News on Monday.

    “It is one of the reasons the Democratic Party is struggling so much nationally,” he added.

    Matthew Bartlett, a Republican strategist and former Trump administration official, said the raids shouldn’t be a surprise because immigration is a “legitimate issue” the voters have signaled they care about.

    “There is no political upside in defending or denying the images of burning cars, rioters and looting and the destruction,” he said of Democrats. “A feeling that things have spun out of control in California and that government can’t effectively govern. … It has changed the conversation from illegal immigration to a breakdown in society.”

    Still, there has been some disagreement — at least in public messaging — about how far to push in going after California Democrats, a break between what may be politically popular with the base and what’s politically realistic.

    The clearest example centers on the Trump administration’s authorizing the deployment of National Guard troops over the opposition of California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass have argued that inserting National Guard troops will inflame tensions and potential violence — a response that has led Trump to signal he would consider arresting Newsom if he were to continue what the administration considers to be his interference.

    “I would do it if I were Tom,” Trump said, referring to his “border czar,” Tom Homan. “I think it’s great. Gavin likes the publicity. But I do think it would be a great thing.”

    While detaining Newsom would no doubt please Trump’s MAGA base, White House officials privately say it’s not currently in the cards.

    “It’s not being actively planned or considered,” a senior White House official said. “But anyone who breaks federal law puts themselves at risk of being arrested. That’s just a basic fact.”

    A second White House official said that if either Newsom or Bass, a former Democratic congresswoman, do something at odds with federal immigration law, they could be detained. But the official also acknowledged that the optics of arresting California officials amid an immigration fight they believe most Americans support could backfire with some Republican voters because, at the moment, it doesn’t appear they have actually broken any immigration laws.

    The official said there isn’t some grand strategy to deploy National Guard troops in blue cities across the country; the administration is simply waiting to see whether other protests get out of control.

    Meanwhile, Newsom has leaned into the threats, practically daring the administration to arrest him rather than focusing on the protesters.

    “He’s a tough guy. Why doesn’t he do that? He knows where to find me,” Newsom told MSNBC on Sunday. Referring to Homan, he added: “That kind of bloviating is exhausting. So, Tom, arrest me. Let’s go.”

    On Monday, California sued the Trump administration, arguing that Trump’s federalizing the state’s National Guard is “unlawful.”

    “Let me be clear: There is no invasion. There is no rebellion,” Democratic state Attorney General Rob Bonta said. “The president is trying to manufacture chaos and crisis on the ground for his own political ends. Federalizing the California National Guard is an abuse of the president’s authority under the law — and not one we take lightly. We’re asking a court to put a stop to the unlawful, unprecedented order.”

    Trump supporters have lined up behind him, with some even offering to head to Los Angeles to help, despite having no law enforcement experience.

    “Preparing to deploy … to Los Angeles,” vocal Trump supporter Benny Johnson said on X. He followed up with a post to his 3.7 million followers showing him wearing military-style gear with his name on it.

    The increasingly contentious political fight over Los Angeles, administration officials admit, is no longer about just deporting those with criminal records, which was Trump’s main pitch to voters on the campaign trail.

    On Monday, an MSNBC host asked Homan whether everyone ICE has arrested as part of the Trump administration’s immigration efforts had criminal records, and he had a blunt response.

    “Absolutely not,” he said.





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  • L.A. Mayor Bass speaks out against federal role in immigration raids

    L.A. Mayor Bass speaks out against federal role in immigration raids


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    • Protester urges L.A. crowd not to ‘give Donald Trump what he wants’

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    • Massive new protests against ICE immigration operations in LA

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    • Los Angeles protester: ICE is ‘terrorizing our families for no reason’

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    • Marines mobilized to base near L.A. to support National Guard during ICE protests

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    • Rabbi at Los Angeles anti-ICE protest ‘saddened’ to hear Marines are mobilizing

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    • Los Angeles braces for fourth day of anti-ICE protests

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    • ‘I would do it’: Trump voices support for arresting Newsom

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    • Waymo cars go up in flames during Los Angeles anti-ICE protests

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    • California Democrats blast Trump’s decision to deploy National Guard

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    • Gas station looted, car set on fire in anti-ICE protests

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    • Border czar says top California officials could get arrested if they impede raids

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    • Trump to Deploy National Guard in LA Amid ICE Protests

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    • Examining the details of the federal criminal indictment against Abrego Garcia

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    During a press conference, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass demanded the federal government stop conducting immigration raids in the city. She suggested that Los Angeles may be “a test case for what happens when the federal government moves in and takes the authority away from the state, or away from local government.”

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  • Diddy’s ex-girlfriend ‘Jane’ tells jurors he treated her like ‘an animal’

    Diddy’s ex-girlfriend ‘Jane’ tells jurors he treated her like ‘an animal’



    This is a free article for Diddy on Trial newsletter subscribers. Sign up to get exclusive reporting and analysis throughout Sean Combs’ federal trial.

    Today, the jurors in Diddy’s trial heard more emotionally wrenching testimony from a woman identified only by the pseudonym “Jane.” She’s one of Diddy’s ex-girlfriends — and one of four alleged victims at the center of the U.S. government’s racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking case against the music mogul.

    Jane told jurors that Diddy forced her to participate in “hotel nights” — sexual encounters with male escorts that made her feel debased. “You treat me like an animal,” Jane said she told him in 2023. She described violent abuse, saying he once put her in a chokehold and punched her in the head. He then forced her to take drugs and perform oral sex on an escort, she told jurors.

    Jane’s testimony is part of prosecutors’ effort to show that Diddy orchestrated a sprawling criminal enterprise to “fulfill his sexual desires.” He has denied all the charges.

    Here’s what else you need to know:

    • Two years ago, according to prosecutors’ exhibits, Jane texted Diddy that she didn’t want to be “used and locked in a room to perform and fulfill your fantasies.” The same day, she told him she didn’t want to fly to New York to “be a hoe for the millionth time” in a hotel room. Jane said she felt obliged to “perform” sex acts that made her feel “disgusting” in part because Diddy paid her rent.
    • Jane said she fainted after Cassie Ventura, another one of Diddy’s ex-girlfriends, filed a lawsuit accusing him of rape and sexual abuse during a 10-year on-and-off relationship. Jane said she was struck by the similarities between their two accounts. “I feel like I’m reading my own sexual trauma,” Jane texted Diddy in 2023.
    • Jane described her suicidal ideation at the end of her relationship with Diddy, adding she told him she would kill herself. In text messages, she told him she believed he would “use” and “break” her. When prosecutor Maurene Comey asked why she sent those texts, Jane cried so hard that it was difficult to understand her answer.
    • In late 2023, Diddy threatened to release sex tapes of Jane and show them to her child’s father, she testified. Jane texted Diddy’s then-chief of staff, Kristina Khorram, and begged her to “talk some sense” into him, according to prosecutors’ exhibits. Khorram assured Jane “he’s not going to do anything,” Jane said.

    🔎 The view from inside

    By Adam Reiss, Chloe Melas and Katherine Koretski

    Jane, facing another grueling day of questions, grew visibly anguished at key moments.

    Her voice cracked as she told jurors about a night in 2023 when, she said, she was instructed to meet Diddy at the Trump International Hotel & Tower New York and directed to have sex with a male escort. She wiped away tears as she recalled telling Diddy she didn’t want to have sex with other men anymore. She sobbed as she recounted her reaction to Ventura’s allegations against Diddy.

    Diddy, wearing khaki pants and what appeared to be a white long-sleeve shirt, seemed engaged in the day’s testimony. He leafed through documents in a folder this morning and regularly leaned over to chat with defense attorney Teny Geragos throughout the day. He appears to have lost considerable weight in federal detention.

    Diddy’s mother, Janice Combs, sat in the gallery. When she entered court, her son mouthed four words in her direction: “I love you, Mommy.”

    👨‍⚖️ Analysis: Far from ordinary lives

    By Danny Cevallos

    Jane testified today that last year she joined the OnlyFans platform, a site frequently used to create explicit content for paid subscriptions. There’s nothing wrong with a government witness creating explicit content. Indeed, the witnesses who cooperate with the government are often outright criminals. Moreover, the jury will be instructed about how to assess the credibility of a witness, and the jury instructions make no distinction among sex workers, doctors or astronauts.

    Credibility is determined by the jurors, and they have few limitations on their ability to make that determination. So even though they shouldn’t discount Jane’s testimony because she was on OnlyFans, they still might.

    Jane said she joined OnlyFans because she “wanted to reclaim having my independence and not rely on anyone and stand on my own two feet.” While the jury shouldn’t discount her testimony because she may have been an OnlyFans content creator, it might discount it if it finds her reason for joining OnlyFans to be not very credible.

    One juror might think there are other jobs that would allow someone to “stand on their own two feet.” Then again, it’s entirely possible that the jury could find reclaiming one’s independence to be a perfectly acceptable, normal reason to join OnlyFans as a content creator.

    No matter what, though, one theme of the government’s witnesses who escaped Diddy’s orbit is that they all lived lives that regular folks have a hard time identifying with.

    🗓 What’s next

    Tomorrow: “Jane” is expected to return to the stand.

    BTW: Every night during Diddy’s trial, NBC’s “Dateline” will drop special episodes of the “True Crime Weekly” podcast to get you up to speed. “Dateline” correspondent Andrea Canning chats with NBC News’ Chloe Melas and special guests — right in front of the courthouse. Listen here.

    If you or someone you know is in crisis, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline or chat live at 988lifeline.org. You can also visit SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources for additional support.



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  • How immigration raids at Ambiance Apparel and Home Depot led to the Los Angeles protests

    How immigration raids at Ambiance Apparel and Home Depot led to the Los Angeles protests


    LOS ANGELES — Four days of unrest in Los Angeles over President Donald Trump’s push to increase immigrant arrests and deportations have led to the arrests of at least 56 people, clashes between protesters and law enforcement officials and the deployment of the National Guard and the Marines in the country’s second-largest city.

    How did this happen?

    The tensions started Friday, when Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and others arrested over 40 immigrants in raids targeting day laborers at a Home Depot parking lot and workers at the Ambiance Apparel clothing manufacturer, searching for “fictitious employee documents.”

    As news of the raids spread fear and panic, relatives and protesters arrived to confront the federal agents wearing camouflage and bulletproof vests.

    Some protesters tried to stop vehicles carrying detained immigrants or used other methods to block arrests.

    Soon the clashes turned violent, with officers using pepper spray and batons, pushing crowds back with riot shields as some protesters fled or retaliated. A prominent labor leader was among those arrested. The protests spread from downtown Los Angeles into the communities of Paramount and Compton, where rumors of arrests also added to the flaring tensions.

    Trump, acting without agreement from state leaders, called in the California National Guard on Saturday. By Sunday, the troops, outfitted with heavy military equipment, had moved into the streets of downtown Los Angeles in a show of force in the state with the largest immigrant population.

    Trump said on his social media site, Truth Social, that he had directed the homeland security and defense secretaries and Attorney General Pam Bondi “to take all such action necessary to liberate Los Angeles from the Migrant Invasion, and put an end to these Migrant riots.”

    But the clashes dragged on through the day and into the night, with looting and driverless cars’ being set on fire.

    The families of the arrested immigrants have accused the government of “kidnapping” their loved ones. Meanwhile, the presence of the troops has set up a battle between the Trump administration and lawmakers in a state that is known for its liberal immigration policies.

    ‘I don’t know where they’ve taken him’

    About two dozen members of the detained workers’ families showed up to a rally and news conference outside Ambiance Apparel on Monday, holding up homemade signs with photos of their loved ones next to birthday cakes, holding their kids and smiling.

    “It has been incredibly painful to witness the arrest of my father and of his co-workers,” said Saraí Ortiz, who said her father, José Ortiz, was among those arrested.

    “My father gave 18 years of his life to this company,” she said at a news conference outside the site of the raid Friday. “He was always here. He was a loyal worker.”

    At least four people at the news conference said they hadn’t received updates from immigration authorities or been able to communicate with their detained family members.

    Jerónimo Martínez, 39, said in an interview through an interpreter that he’s worried about Lázaro Maldonado, his nephew, because the family hasn’t had any communication with him since Friday.

    “I don’t know where they’ve taken him,” Martínez said. “I don’t know what place he might be in, so I am worried.”

    A young man who identified himself as Carlos said he considers his brother, José, to have been “kidnapped,” because his brother was taken by force in the Ambiance raid and is being held without being able to contact relatives or lawyers, which he said is the definition of kidnapping.

    “The only crime he committed was trying to live a better life and trying to get ahead and work. Because of that dream, I had to witness him being chained up like he was some dangerous animal. The whole process wasn’t just inhumane; it was illegal,” Carlos said.

    A woman speaks outside Ambiance Apparel in Los Angeles
    A young woman speaks about her father, Mario Romero, an Ambiance Apparel employee who was detained by ICE.Tyler Kingkade / NBC News

    Trump also mobilized about 700 Marines on Monday to support the National Guard in protecting federal personnel and property, U.S. Northern Command said in a statement.

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom blamed anarchists and troublemakers for the fires and any violence, not peaceful protesters, but he said, “Donald Trump at the end of the day is the sponsor of these conditions.” Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said in a statement on X that “Trump didn’t inherit a crisis — he created one.”

    California Attorney General Rob Bonta sued the Trump administration for federalizing the state’s National Guard troops and deploying them to quell protests over objections of California government leaders.

    The raids were a striking departure by the administration from Trump’s campaign statements that his plans for mass deportation would focus on violent immigrant criminals.

    People gather in front of Ambiance Apparel after several employees were taken into custody by federal agents
    Supporters gathered in front of Ambiance Apparel after several employees were taken into custody Friday.Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

    The raids follow weeks of ICE officers and other federal agents’ showing up at immigration courts across the country, including in California, to arrest people as they left the courthouses where their cases were dismissed.

    Those arrests have been accompanied by video on social media or captured by news outlets of some family members being arrested and of young children standing nearby as a parent or parents are handcuffed or restrained with zip ties.

    Increasingly, people are seeing ICE arrest and take away immigrants who’ve lived and worked in the United States for years or are part of their community, including people who are seeking asylum or had other temporary legal protection from deportation.

    NBC News reported last week that White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, angry over what he saw as low numbers of arrests and deportations, ordered senior ICE officials to begin detaining 3,000 migrants a day or be fired.

    Amid the turmoil, ICE was already ramping up arrests by using thousands more federal law enforcement personnel and up to 21,000 National Guard troops in what it had dubbed “Operation At Large,” NBC News reported.

    Protest following multiple detentions in downtown Los Angeles
    Demonstrators faced off with Los Angeles police Sunday.Daniel Cole / Reuters

    Before the clashes in Los Angeles, smaller confrontations between protesters and law enforcement had begun to erupt in other cities around the country. In Chicago on Wednesday, chaos unfolded as protesters confronted ICE officers over arrests during scheduled check-ins with immigration officials.

    In San Diego, a surprise raid by armed federal officers at a popular Italian restaurant drew protests. Officers dispersed the crowd with what were identified as flash bang grenades.

    In Los Angeles, protests and tensions continued.

    Tyler Kingkade reported from Los Angeles and Suzanne Gamboa from San Antonio.



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  • ‘Call Her Daddy’ host Alex Cooper claims college soccer coach sexually harassed her

    ‘Call Her Daddy’ host Alex Cooper claims college soccer coach sexually harassed her



    Popular podcaster Alex Cooper claims in a new docuseries that she was sexually harassed by her soccer coach during her time playing the sport at Boston University.

    “Call Her Alex,” which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on Sunday and debuts on Hulu on Tuesday, chronicles the media figure’s ascent to stardom, detailing her early childhood in Pennsylvania and her journey to become one of the most influential podcasters.

    In the two-part docuseries, which NBC News viewed screeners of, the “Call Her Daddy” host alleges that her former coach Nancy Feldman “fixated” on her, “wanting to know who I was dating … making comments on my body, and always wanting to be alone with me.”

    Cooper played on the team from 2013-2015, according to the B.U. women’s soccer website. Feldman, who retired in 2022 after 27 years at the university, made comments about her appearance and her legs, Cooper alleges, and put her hand on Cooper’s thigh. She said Feldman also once questioned her about a date, asking if she had sex the night before.

    “I felt so deeply uncomfortable,” she says in the docuseries, adding that she was attending B.U. on a full-tuition scholarship and felt if she “didn’t follow” Feldman’s rules, she’d be “gone.”

    In the docuseries, Cooper’s mom says the family reached out to a lawyer who advised them to sue Feldman, but warned litigation could take years. Cooper said her parents reached out to B.U. to report the claims of sexual harassment. Her mom said she provided notes to B.U. that she took from her calls with Cooper over the years in which her daughter described the alleged incidents. The notes were shown in the docuseries.

    Cooper claims she told B.U. she wanted to play her senior year but she couldn’t play for Feldman. The university, she alleges, said they told her they wouldn’t be conducting an investigation and said they wouldn’t fire Feldman. They said Cooper could keep her scholarship even if she didn’t play her senior year.

    “Within five minutes, they had entirely dismissed everything I had been through,” Cooper said.

    Feldman and a representative for Boston University did not respond to requests for comment made on Monday. A spokesperson for Cooper said she is not commenting further.

    The docuseries does not include a statement from the university or from Feldman.

    During a Q&A with director Ry Russo-Young after the Tribeca screening, Cooper reflected on her decision to speak out 10 years after the alleged harassment.

    In the years since she graduated, Cooper, now 30, has built a media empire. Her millions of listeners, nicknamed the “Daddy Gang,” consider her the go-to voice on relationships, dating and life in your 20s and 30s. In addition to her podcast, one of the most listened to on Spotify, she launched the Unwell Network, a subsidiary of the media company Trending, which she founded with her now-husband, Matt Kaplan, and a drink brand.

    She said that while filming the documentary project she returned to B.U.’s campus for the first time, and she got emotional.

    “At this point in the filming process, I was not sure I wanted to talk about this experience,” she said during the Q&A, according to People, which also shared a clip of the conversation on Instagram.

    “The minute I stepped back on that field, I felt so small,” Cooper said. “I just felt like I was 18 years old again, and I was in a situation with someone in a position of power who abused their power, and I felt like I wasn’t the ‘Call Her Daddy’ girl. I wasn’t someone who had money and influence or whatever. I was just another woman who experienced harassment on a level that changed my life forever and took away the thing I loved the most.”

    This is the first time Cooper has opened up about the allegations, though she has alluded to having a “traumatic experience” with a coach during her time on the team in the past. In a 2023 interview with Cosmopolitan magazine, she described a “specific thing” without mentioning what had happened, saying “it’s so personal to me and it took such a toll on my mental health.”

    She said reconnecting with people she played soccer with, “who were around when things were happening,” had been “pretty cathartic” for her.

    “I met up with one of my teammates in Santa Monica who I hadn’t seen since we graduated — we didn’t even say hi, we just both started crying,” she said. “There’s another woman that went through it with me, and we finally saw each other recently, and it’s just wild to talk about it together. Connecting with these other women with these scars, that’s the first step to me actually being like, “Oh my god, I’m feeling better.”





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  • Appendix cancers on the rise in younger generations, study finds

    Appendix cancers on the rise in younger generations, study finds



    Although they are very rare, cancers of the appendix are on the rise, a new study finds.

    An analysis of a National Cancer Institute database found that compared with older generations, rates of appendix cancer have tripled among Gen X and quadrupled among millennials, according to the report, published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

    “There is a disproportionate burden of appendix cancer among young individuals,” said the study’s lead author, Andreana Holowatyj, an assistant professor of hematology and oncology at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Vanderbilt Ingram Cancer Center.

    Holowatyj’s earlier research was “the first to show that 1 in every 3 appendix cancers is diagnosed among adults younger than age 50,” she said in a phone interview. “That’s compared to 1 in every 8 colorectal cancers diagnosed among adults younger than age 50.”

    Still, appendix cancers are extremely rare: According to the National Cancer Institute, they occur at a rate of 1 to 2 per million people in the United States a year.

    To see whether rates of the cancer had changed over time, Holowatyj turned to the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results program, which includes data from nationally representative cancer registries that cover about 45.9% of the U.S. population.

    Overall, there were 4,858 cases of appendix cancer from 1975 through 2019.

    When the large proportion of patients diagnosed between ages 18 and 49 is combined with the new finding of a generational rise in Gen X and millennials, it’s “important that we find the causes underpinning these statistics in order to reverse this trend and reduce the disease burden,” Holowatyj said.

    The new study further confirms that there is a trend toward younger and younger patients from recent generations being hit with gastrointestinal cancers, said Dr. Andrea Cercek, a medical oncologist and a co-director of the Center for Early Onset Colorectal and GI Cancers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.

    In particular, rates of colorectal cancer in younger adults have been rising for several decades. The cause for the rise in such GI cancers needs more research.

    “It’s likely that there are environmental causes, which include exposures to food, water and micro plastics or lifestyle or dietary changes,” said Cercek, who wasn’t involved with the new research. “You can’t really pin it down to one thing or another. It’s likely multiple factors causing this rise after 1945.”

    The appendix is a small pouch that hangs off the large intestine on the lower right side of the abdomen. A blockage can lead to infection and inflammation, called appendicitis, which needs emergency treatment.

    Unlike other cancers of the GI tract, appendix cancers aren’t easily found because they’re not as easy to see on abdominal scans and won’t be picked up by colonoscopies, said Dr. Deborah Doroshow, an associate professor of medicine at the Tisch Cancer Institute at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. “So it’s not easy to detect or screen for them.”

    In fact, Holowatyj said, about 95% of appendix cancers aren’t spotted until after a person has appendicitis and the appendix is removed and examined by pathologists. As a result, the cancers tend to be at a late stage with poorer long-term prognoses, she added.

    Doroshow, who wasn’t involved with the new study, said it’s important for patients and their doctors to be more aware of subtle symptoms. Symptoms such as changes in energy level, a new persistent pain or unexplained weight loss in a young person shouldn’t be ignored, she said.

    “If a person is feeling that something is not right it’s always best to get an opinion,” Doroshow said. “We’ve diagnosed young people with cancer whom other health care providers had not taken seriously because they were young.”

    Women and people of color may find they need to advocate for themselves, she added.

    Doroshow said people shouldn’t be worrying about every single abdominal pain. Rather, it’s persistent pain that would be a concern.



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  • Republicans focus on trans athletes in their early attacks against Jon Ossoff in Georgia

    Republicans focus on trans athletes in their early attacks against Jon Ossoff in Georgia



    In the early stages of the campaign, Republicans seeking to unseat Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff in one of the key races of the 2026 midterm elections are leaning heavily into attacks over transgender athletes in women’s sports.

    Two GOP-aligned groups launched ads on the issue in recent weeks. And GOP Rep. Buddy Carter hit the airwaves with an ad prodding Ossoff on the issue soon after launching his campaign.

    Republican candidates and campaigns have frequently leaned on culture war issues in recent years as a way to excite the base and frame Democrats as out of touch, particularly in red-leaning states. And they’re even more emboldened after President Donald Trump bombarded then-Vice President Kamala Harris with an onslaught of ads that attacked her support for transgender people during the 2024 election.

    But while Democrats are gearing up for a difficult re-election fight for Ossoff in a state Trump won narrowly in 2024, they think the issue will be drowned out by voters’ concerns about the economy, particularly Trump’s handling of it. Even so, it’s an issue for which Democrats lack a consensus about how to respond to GOP broadsides, as prominent members of the party grapple with whether to embrace protecting the transgender community as part of their values, deflect the question, or come out against including transgender athletes in women’s sports.

    Ossoff is the only Democratic incumbent defending a seat in a state Trump won last year, making him far-and-away the top target for Senate Republicans. Still, some Republicans admit that Ossoff will be difficult to beat, particularly now that Gov. Brian Kemp decided not to seek the seat.

    The early Republican criticism of Ossoff points to the Democratic senator’s vote on legislation in February that would make it a Title IX violation (jeopardizing federal education funding) for states to allow transgender women and girls to participate in female sports. The bill failed to get the 60 votes it needed to advance in the Senate.

    One Nation, the nonprofit aligned with Senate Republicans’ main super PAC, has spent at least $400,000 airing an ad reminiscent of a key tagline from one of Trump’s anti-Harris ads from last year: “Man-to-man defense isn’t woke enough for Ossoff, he’s playing for they/them.”

    Carter’s opening salvo of ads included a spot touting the congressman’s MAGA credentials while a person purporting to be a transgender woman holds sports trophies and stands in front of a transgender pride flag talking about how Ossoff has been an ally to the community.

    Asked about the GOP criticism of that vote, Ossoff campaign communications director Ellie Dougherty told NBC News in a statement that “American parents don’t need federal bureaucrats confirming our children’s genitalia,” a reference to how a state might enforce the mandate in the Republican bill.

    Scott Paradise, who managed Republican Herschel Walker’s losing Senate campaign in 2022, told NBC News that Ossoff’s first Senate run in 2020 provided a “perfect storm” that allowed Ossoff to position himself as a “centrist” by narrowing his focus to “bread-and-butter issues.”

    “If he’s talking about the economy or he’s talking about moments where he has stood with the right — whether it’s Middle East, to the extent he has on immigration — it’s easier for him to muddy the waters. But this is such a black-and-white issue in a center-right state” that allows Republicans to try to frame him as out of step, Paradise said.

    Polling broadly shows the American public doesn’t support transgender women playing in female sports. Last month’s NBC News Stay Tuned Poll, powered by SurveyMonkey found that 75% opposed it and 25% supported it. Other national polling has found similar trends.

    That’s one reason why Trump’s campaign focused heavily on the issue in ads, arguing that Harris was outside the mainstream and pointing to her past support for gender-affirming treatments for prison inmates. After the election, Democrats have disagreed over whether the party’s position on transgender rights, particularly in women’s sports, cost them electorally.

    Asked about the attacks last month during an interview on “Political Breakfast,” a podcast hosted by Georgia’s public radio affiliate, Ossoff said the big early spending is a signal to him that “demonstrates the national GOP understands the strength that I’ll be bringing to this re-election campaign.”

    The Democrat called Republicans, particularly GOP political consultants, “obsessed and preoccupied with this issue.”

    Thinking ahead about “top of mind” issues for voters in 2026, Ossoff added, will it be “whether or not federal bureaucrats are investigating the sexual biology of adolescent athletes? I don’t think so,” he added.

    Amy Morton, a Democratic strategist in Georgia, elaborated that she believes the midterms will instead be a “referendum on the economy” and Trump’s handling of it, emphasizing the Democratic attacks on the GOP’s broad policy bill that’s working its way through Congress.

    “They’re going to continue to lean into that issue because they don’t want to talk about the issues that are really impacting Georgians,” she said, adding, “They made a strategic decision to wrap their arms around Donald Trump so there won’t be a degree of separation between his failure as an executive and their failure.”

    A Democratic strategist who worked on Sen. Raphael Warnock’s successful re-election in Georgia in 2022 added that, like their former boss, Ossoff’s high-profile elections have helped to define him in the state, making them skeptical that a GOP attempt to brand him as extreme will stick. They added that while Warnock’s 2022 Republican opponent, Herschel Walker, leaned heavily on social issues during his unsuccessful bid, Kemp won comfortably with a very different message on the same ballot, showing how a campaign can focus on the issues it wants and leave others to the side.

    “You saw Brian Kemp run an extremely disciplined race on the economy. You were hard-pressed to get Kemp on the record about abortion in 2022 — the man was laser-focused on small businesses, jobs and the economy. That was the consistent message you heard out of Brian Kemp. You compare that to Herschel Walker and, you can do the math: 300,000 votes,” the Democrat said.

    But the economy was also a top issue in the 2024 election, and Trump and the Republican Party still managed to turn their attacks on trans issues into a memorable tagline that stuck with some voters. That’s why one national Republican strategist told NBC News that the attack isn’t a “replacement” for a cogent economic argument, but “part of the equation.”

    “It’s an issue that obviously had a massive impact in 2024. The Trump campaign’s ‘Harris is for they/them’ ad is one of the greatest ads of our generation in that it’s so simple and was so effective,” the strategist said.

    Ads about transgender participants in women’s sports can run “on top of: Oh, he also voted to help ensure that illegal immigrants get government-paid health care and he voted against the Laken Riley amendment in 2024 before it was convenient,” the strategist added.

    While the transgender sports attacks are drawing headlines, both sides have been running ads focused on spending in Washington, too. Democrats have attacked the GOP’s policy bill working its way through Washington, and Republicans hit Ossoff for backing former President Joe Biden’s signature spending bill in 2022.

    Tharon Johnson, a Georgia Democratic strategist who worked for Biden’s 2020 campaign in the state, agreed that Republicans are “going to be hard-pressed to make Jon Ossoff into this radical,” in part because of his work both in office and on the campaign trail.

    And while he believes the situation Harris found herself in last year isn’t the same one Ossoff finds himself in now, he said Democrats can still draw a lesson from it: “Respond sooner, and more effectively.”

    So far, Ossoff’s response has been to stay focused on the economy and try to frame the debate as about local control.



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