Trump says it's ridiculous for Musk to start a political partyNew Foto - Trump says it's ridiculous for Musk to start a political party

MORRISTOWN, New Jersey (Reuters) -President Donald Trump said on Sunday that billionaire Elon Musk's move to start a new U.S. political party is ridiculous and could add to confusion. "I think it's ridiculous to start a third party," Trump told reporters before boarding Air Force One in Morristown, New Jersey. "Starting a third party just adds to confusion... He can have fun with it, but I think it's ridiculous." (Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Nathan Howard; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Trump says it's ridiculous for Musk to start a political party

Trump says it's ridiculous for Musk to start a political party MORRISTOWN, New Jersey (Reuters) -President Donald Trump said on Sunday t...
America is ready to celebrate its 250th birthday. But are Americans?New Foto - America is ready to celebrate its 250th birthday. But are Americans?

We who call the United States home are preparing to celebrate the country's star-spangled semiquincentennial next year ‒ not just with flags and fireworks but also some serious conversations about history and what it means to be an American. Among the celebrations: amassive fireworks display at Mount Rushmoreon July 3, 2026, and what organizers hope will be the single-largest flag-waving celebration in history. And President Donald Trump on July 3 announced he's also planning to host anUltimate Fighting Championship event at the White Houseas part of the festivities. Trump formally kicked off the yearlong celebration on July 3 with aboisterous rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds. Trump campaigned on an "America first" platform, and he's long invoked symbols of patriotism during his rallies, including having Lee Greenwood sing his hit "God Bless the USA," and literally embracing Old Glory. "This Fourth of July our magnificent destiny is closer than ever before. We are one people, one family and one united American nation," he said to cheers. "We will fight, fight, fight. We will win, win, win, because we are Americans and our hearts bleed red, white and blue." Trump also reaffirmed his plans to hold a "Great American State Fair" with exhibits from all 50 states that will begin in Iowa, along with other national celebrations. And while there will be parties and parades aplenty for the nation's 250th anniversary, some scholars are also urging Americans to spend time thinking deeply about the country's past and future. The anniversary comes at a time of deep partisan divisions, particularly about the role of immigrants in this nation of them. Trump directly addressed the divide facing the nation during his Iowa appearance, criticizing Democrats who he says "hate" America, and offering the same sentiment in return. Trump made the comments in connection with final passage earlier in the day of his "big, beautiful bill," whichimplements tax and Medicaid cutswhile dramatically expanding immigration enforcement, and was unanimously opposed by congressional Democrats. "I really do. I hate them. I cannot stand them because I really believe they hate our country, you want to know the truth," Trump said at what was billed as a nonpartisan semiquincentennial kickoff event. Polls show Americans are less patriotic today than ever before recorded. A new Gallup poll found that 58% of U.S. adults say they are either "extremely" or "very" proud to be an American, a record low compared to almost total unity following the 9/11 attacks 24 years ago. Strikingly, the poll found that younger Americans were far less likely to be patriotic than older generations: Only 41% of Gen Z is extremely or very proud to be American, compared to nearly 75% of baby boomers. The poll also found that Democrats in particular are the source of the drop: Across all ages, just 36% said they are extremely or very proud, down from 62% a year ago. Independents also showed a loss, falling to a record-low 53%, the poll found. In contrast, 92% of Republicans said they were extremely or very proud of the country, Gallup found. "Patriotism is now polarized ‒ to some degree it depends on whoever is the president and that hasn't always been the case," said John J. Pitney Jr., a conservative author, former Republican National Committee staffer, and a government professor at California's Claremont McKenna College. "People in the other party are not just mistaken but are enemies." But Pitney said real American patriotism is alive and well: Everyone who volunteers to serve in the military or a local fire department, who helps out at a food bank or tithes to their local church is helping make good on the promise of America, he said. "Parades are great, all the celebrations are terrific, but that's not really what patriotism is about," Pitney said. "It's certainly possible to take criticism of the country too far. The trouble with Trump's plans is they sound awfully superficial. His patriotism doesn't run any deeper than the cloth of the flag." While celebrations of the country's 250th anniversary by necessity invoke the past, Trump has signaled he wants a historical focus that boosts his vision of patriotism, loyalty and liberty. In conjunction with the anniversary, Trump has ordered the creation of a $34 million National Garden of American Heroes, featuring life-size statues of notable figures from American history, including President John Adams, Red Cross founder Clara Barton, airplane inventors Orville and Wilbur Wright, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. and astronaut Christa McAuliffe, along with former President Ronald Reagan and former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. Only American citizens are eligible to create the statues. "America owes its present greatness to its past sacrifices. Because the past is always at risk of being forgotten, monuments will always be needed to honor those who came before," Trump said in announcing the statue garden. "These statues are silent teachers in solid form of stone and metal. They preserve the memory of our American story and stir in us a spirit of responsibility for the chapters yet unwritten." In announcing the garden, Trump also ordered the Justice Department to vigorously prosecute anyone caught damaging or defacing memorials and statues. And he has ordered the National Park Service and national museums to focus on history that unites and inspires Americans, rather than on what he considers issues that would "divide Americans based on race." "The Golden Age of America is upon us," Trump said in Iowa on July 3. "This incredible national resurgence is happening just in time for one of the biggest events in the history of our country. Exactly one year from tomorrow, we will celebrate the 250th anniversary of America's founding with this birthday party, the likes of which you have never seen before." Eric Foner, a retired Columbia University history professor and Pulitzer Prize-winning author, said countries have long struggled to balance an honest assessment of their history with the push for patriotism. He said the reality is every country has both good and bad on its ledger, and talking about all aspects help build a stronger nation. Some historians have noted that while Trump is willing to acknowledge the end of slavery in the United States, he's been reluctant ‒ if not outright hostile ‒ to talking about the structural racism that remains as a legacy of that enslavement. "It's a self-defeating set of events when you try to just create a patriotic history and glorification," Foner said. "What we remember is also related to what we forget." Trump's 250th celebration plans will operate in conjunction with theU.S. Semiquincentennial Commission, which has been working on the celebrations since 2016. The nonpartisan commission known as America250 is honorarily co-chaired by former first couples: President George W. Bush and Laura Bush, and President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama. It is the country's official birthday party planner, with the backing of all three co-equal branches of government. America250 – which has corporate sponsors including Walmart, Palantir, Amazon and Goldman Sachs – is planning the biggest single-year volunteer effort in the country's history, along with sponsoring field trips and oral history recordings. The commission is also organizing a playlist of musical anthems celebrating America, a tech expo to highlight innovation, and a series of concerts celebrating American composers, performers, musicians and dancers. Its new executive director is a former Fox News producer and deputy director of communications for first ladyMelania Trump. "America250 is working to provide the most inspiring celebration that is 'of the people, by the people, and for the people' of this great nation," thecommission promises. "America250's mission is to commemorate the 250th anniversary with inclusive programs that inspire Americans to renew and strengthen our daring experiment in democracy." Tamika Middleton traces her American heritage though the family's graveyard on a dirt road in South Carolina. One ancestor fought for the Union during the Civil War, and her mom still lives on the land that's been in their family since the 1800s. As the descendent of formerly enslaved people, Middleton wants to see the United States live up to the promises it has always made. For her, that means talking honestly and openly about the country's racist past and about how exclusionary policies have hurt people who look like her. "I have a right to this country. No matter what people think about my critiques or the work that I do, my folks' blood is in the soil," said Middleton, 41. "I have a right to this country, and I have a right to its best self." The managing director of the Women's March, Middleton said organizers have been talking regularly about the importance of an "honest look" at the country's history at the time of its 250th, and what it would take to reach that perfect union where all people are truly equal. Leaders of the 2017 Women's March against Trump organized "Free America" counterprotests during this year's Independence Day celebrations. "What good is life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness without health care?" Middleton asked. "What good is life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness without housing?" Middleton said the Women's March is still deciding how it will approach the country's 250th anniversary, but she encouraged Americans to consider the words of civil rights-era activist Fannie Lou Hamer:  "Nobody's free until everybody's free." Said Middleton: "I would love for people to be thinking about how to bring that to fruition ‒ what does it require every day, the kind of depth, the kind of accountability, the kind of unity. What does it require of us to ensure we are building a different kind of world and a different kind of country?" This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:America is ready to celebrate its 250th birthday. But are Americans?

America is ready to celebrate its 250th birthday. But are Americans?

America is ready to celebrate its 250th birthday. But are Americans? We who call the United States home are preparing to celebrate the count...
Cavaliers re-sign Merrill while Nance is back for 2nd stint. Trade for Ball becomes officialNew Foto - Cavaliers re-sign Merrill while Nance is back for 2nd stint. Trade for Ball becomes official

CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cleveland Cavaliers will have a pair of familiar players back next season. The Cavs announced on Sunday they have re-signed Sam Merrill to a four-year contract and brought back Larry Nance Jr. for a second stint on a one-year deal. Cleveland's acquisition of Lonzo Ball from the Chicago Bulls for Isaac Okorowas also made official on the first day of the signing period. Merrill averaged 7.2 points and made 137 3-pointers in 71 games last season. The fifth-year guard had 27 points and nine 3s on Feb. 2 at Dallas. Merrill was the final pick in the 2020 draft by New Orleans before joining the Cavaliers in March 2023. Retaining Merrill became a priority after Ty Jerome agreed to deal with Memphis. Nance spent parts of four seasons with the Cavs from 2018 through '21. He appeared in 182 games, including 76 starts, and averaged 9.5 points and 7.5 rebounds. The 6-foot-8 forward/center also was part of Cleveland's last NBA Finals team in 2018. Nance played for Atlanta last season and averaged 8.5 points and 4.3 rebounds in 24 games with three starts. He was the 27th overall pick by the Los Angeles Lakers in the 2015 NBA draft, and has also been with Portland and New Orleans during his 10-year career. The Nances are one of only two families in NBA history to have three members play for the same franchise. Larry Nance Sr. was with Cleveland from 1988-94 and Pete Nance played there from 2023-24. Nance Jr. will again wear No. 22 with the Cavs, the same number worn by his father, which was retired in 1995. Ball gives Cleveland a veteran point guard. Darius Garland is likely to miss the start of the regular season after undergoing surgery on his left big toe earlier this month. Ball averaged 7.6 points, 3.4 rebounds and 3.3 assists in 35 games this past season after missing the 2022-23 and 2023-24 campaigns because of a left knee injury. The 27-year old Ball underwent a meniscus and cartilage transplant in his left knee in March 2023 after two surgeries failed to fix an injury he suffered during his first season in Chicago in 2021-22. He has one year remaining on his contract with a team option for the 2026-27 season. ___ AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Cavaliers re-sign Merrill while Nance is back for 2nd stint. Trade for Ball becomes official

Cavaliers re-sign Merrill while Nance is back for 2nd stint. Trade for Ball becomes official CLEVELAND (AP) — The Cleveland Cavaliers will h...
Cowboys WR KaVontae Turpin arrested on marijuana, weapons charges in TexasNew Foto - Cowboys WR KaVontae Turpin arrested on marijuana, weapons charges in Texas

Dallas Cowboys wide receiver and return specialist KaVontae Turpin was arrested on a pair of misdemeanor charges on Saturday, according toThe Dallas Morning News. Turpin was arrested and booked into the Collin County Jail, which sits just northeast of Dallas, on Saturday on possession of marijuana and unlawful carrying of a weapon. Further specifics on the incident are not yet known, though both charges are misdemeanors in the state of Texas. Turpin was released from jail on Sunday. It's unclear what discipline he'll face from the league, if any. This marks just the latest off-field issue Turpin has faced throughout his playing career. The former TCU standout was kicked off the team in college after he was arrested on assault charges, to which he later pleaded guilty. Turpin went undrafted out of TCU, and he played in multiple other leagues before finally landing with the Cowboys ahead of the 2022 season. He was even named the USFL's MVP when he played with the New Jersey Generals. The 28-year-old has shined with the Cowboys in recent years, too. He's earned two Pro Bowl nods in his three seasons there, and he had a career-high 420 receiving yards and two touchdowns on 31 catches last year. He was also a first-team All-Pro kick returner with a league-high 904 kick return yards and two total touchdown returns while averaging 33.5 yards per kickoff return. The Cowboys will officially open training camp in Southern California on July 21. They will open the season on Sept. 4 against the Philadelphia Eagles.

Cowboys WR KaVontae Turpin arrested on marijuana, weapons charges in Texas

Cowboys WR KaVontae Turpin arrested on marijuana, weapons charges in Texas Dallas Cowboys wide receiver and return specialist KaVontae Turpi...
Centrist Rep. Don Bacon is done with Congress — but open to a potential presidential bidNew Foto - Centrist Rep. Don Bacon is done with Congress — but open to a potential presidential bid

WASHINGTON — Centrist Rep. Don Bacon, one of the most vulnerable Republicans in the House, said this week he doesn't have the "hunger" for another grueling re-election campaign and won't run for a sixth term next year. But Bacon, who spent 30 years in the Air Force and specialized in intelligence matters, said he's interested in serving in an executive role down the road, and wouldn't rule out running for Nebraska governor, or even president in 2028. "I got asked the other day, 'You say you're interested in being an executive — is that governor or president?' I go, 'Yes,'" Bacon said in an interview in his office. "If there's an opportunity and I can make a difference, a unique difference, I would like to keep serving. I just don't want to do two-year elections." Bacon, 61, acknowledged that it'd be incredibly difficult to run for the White House as a current or former House member — James Garfield was successful way back in 1880. And Bacon said he's not sure his brand of Republicanism — Reaganism and a muscular view of foreign policy — can ever make a full comeback in the party, though he said he will continue making the case for it. "I don't think it would be very easily done," he said. "All I know is I have a heart to serve our country, and I have a vision." Defense secretary is another option "if God opens up that door," he said, though he's not sure a Republican president would nominate him. He said he would not run against incumbent Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen, a fellow Republican and close friend who took office in 2023. Bacon's retirement from Congress is notable because he is one of the few sitting Republicans on Capitol Hill who have been willing to publicly criticize President Donald Trump, who has a reputation for retaliating against his enemies and ending their political careers. Bacon's announcement came just a day after another Republican who's clashed with Trump, Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, said hewouldn't seek re-electionin 2026. The pair of retirements came as both Tillis and Bacon were preparing to vote on Trump's mammoth domestic policy package — what the president calls his "big, beautiful bill" — as both lawmakers expressed concerns about Medicaid cuts in the package. Tillis voted against it; Bacon voted for it. But in the interview, Bacon insisted that neither the public feuds with Trump nor theviolent threatshe and his wife have faced had any impact on his decision to leave Congress. First elected alongside Trump in 2016, Bacon represents a swing district that includes Omaha and rural areas to the west; in 2024, Democrat Kamala Harris beat Trump in the district by 4.6 percentage points, while Baconprevailedover his Democratic challenger, Tony Vargas, 50.9% to 49.1%. Bacon lamented that running in a tough battleground district every two years was an exhausting endeavor, and that he didn't have "the fire in my belly" to win a sixth race. "This job requires a 14-hour day during the week, Saturdays, parades and a variety of things, and Sunday sometimes. And do I want to do this for two more years? I just didn't have the hunger to want to work at that intensity level," said Bacon, who has a large pig figurine sitting on his desk. "And my wife has wanted me to come home. I'm gone to D.C. four days a week, and I have a chance to be home now seven days a week, and I have eight grandkids within 10 minutes of my house." Bacon said he thinks he could have won re-election had he run, even though the party that controls the White House typically loses House seats in a president's first midterm election. On top of that, Democrats aresalivatingat the chance to attack Republicans for voting for Trump's "big, beautiful bill," which slashes Medicaid benefits that are critical to districts like Bacon's. A Nebraska rural hospital said Thursday it wouldclose in the coming monthsdue to looming Medicaid cuts. Bacon argued the legislation had not taken effect yet and that it included $50 billion for rural hospitals. He said he had to weigh the pros and cons in the bill; he decided that extending the 2017 Trump tax cuts and boosting military and border funding outweighed any negative impacts. "There's some things I wish were better," he said. "But am I going to vote to raise taxes on middle-class Americans? I'm not." On the day of the interview, NBC News and other outlets reported that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had ordered apausein sending a shipment of missiles and ammunition to Ukraine amid concerns about the U.S. military's stockpiles. Bacon, who has a photograph on the wall of him meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has consistently been critical of Trump's handling of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and his "appeasement" of Putin. Whoever ordered the weapons pause should be fired, Bacon said. "If Ukraine falls, the world's a more dangerous place. I really don't understand why President Trump doesn't see that. And if Ukraine goes down, Moldova will definitely fall. I think Georgia is in trouble," said Bacon, a retired brigadier general who did four tours of duty in Iraq and also spent time in Afghanistan. "President Trump has done worse than Biden [on Ukraine], and I'm embarrassed to say that," he continued. "I don't like it. He seems to have a blind spot with Putin. I don't know what purpose it serves to withhold weapons to Ukraine and not see that Putin is the invader." "I do believe that if I was the president," Bacon said, "I'd be trying to provide Ukraine with every weapon they needed to convince Putin he has no chance to win." Bacon said he was a big fan of former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley when she ran for president in 2024, and he likes Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Secretary of State Marco Rubio as potential candidates in 2028. Asked about JD Vance, who famouslydressed down Zelenskyyat a White House meeting in February, Bacon suggested the vice president needed to take a tougher stance toward Moscow. "He's a contender. I like him personally, but I wish he saw the Russian threat a little better," Bacon said.

Centrist Rep. Don Bacon is done with Congress — but open to a potential presidential bid

Centrist Rep. Don Bacon is done with Congress — but open to a potential presidential bid WASHINGTON — Centrist Rep. Don Bacon, one of the mo...
How Trump's policies are reshaping immigration enforcement in Puerto RicoNew Foto - How Trump's policies are reshaping immigration enforcement in Puerto Rico

In Barrio Obrero, a predominantly Dominican neighborhood in Puerto Rico, the chilling effect of unprecedented immigration raids in the U.S. territory has been paralyzing. With homes and businesses desolate, a truck with speakers has been cruising through the streets of the working-class neighborhood with a message. "Suddenly, in that darkness, they heard: 'Immigrants, you have rights,'" Ariadna Godreau, a human rights lawyer in Puerto Rico, told NBC News. The legal nonprofit she leads,Ayuda Legal Puerto Rico,hired the truck, known as a "tumba coco," to make people aware of their rights and announce the launch ofa new hotline, the first in Puerto Rico providing legal support to immigrants, Godreau said. Over 300 families have already called the hotline and spoken with attorneys free of charge as they figure out their legal options in the face of a changing immigration landscape, Godreau said. Residents in Puerto Rico now fear that President Donald Trump's efforts to carry outmass deportationswill fundamentally change how immigration policies are enforced in a U.S. territory that hadlong been perceived as a sanctuary for immigrants. That perception was first shattered on Jan. 27, the same week Trump took office.Immigration authorities raidedBarrio Obrero andarrested more than 40 people.Witnesses toldTelemundo Puerto Rico, NBC's sister station on the island, that they saw agents break down the doors of several homes and businesses. Detainees were handcuffed, placed in vans and taken away, they said. In his 40 years living in Puerto Rico, Ramón Muñoz, a Dominican immigrant, had seen authorities sporadically detain undocumented people but never "with the aggressiveness" displayed during that raid. Complicating matters for immigrants in Puerto Rico, those detained are transferred to the mainland U.S. — an ocean away from their families and attorneys managing their immigration cases — becausethere are no permanent detention centerson the island that can hold detainees for prolonged periods, according to Rebecca González-Ramos, the special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations in San Juan. Aracely Terrero, one of the atleast 732 immigrants arrested by federal immigration authorities in Puerto Ricoso far this year, spent a month being bounced around three different detention centers in the States before she was released last week after animmigration judge determined she should have never been detained in the first place. A local police officer in the coastal town of Cabo Rojo alerted federal immigration authorities about Terrero after the officer found her selling ice cream at the beach without business permits, Telemundo Puerto Rico reported. Terrero hada visaand was in the process of obtaining a green card when she was taken into immigration custody, her attorney Ángel Robles and Annette Martínez, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Puerto Rico, told NBC News. Local policies in Puerto Rico limit coordination between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities, Martínez said. Yet the ACLU in Puerto Rico is seeingmore cases in which local policeare suspected of racially profiling Dominican immigrants with the purposes of alerting federal immigration authorities, reigniting concerns about the revival of "discriminatory policing practices" that led topolice reforms in Puerto Rico a decade ago, Martínez said. Terrero's case also spotlighted how difficult it is for families and attorneys to keep track of detainees once they are sent to the States, Martínez added. "It was a nightmare,"Terrero told Telemundo Puerto Ricofollowing her release. "It was a very difficult journey because I'd never been arrested in my life. I'd never seen myself like this, with handcuffs, like a criminal." González-Ramos, the HSI special agent, said ina local radio interviewlast week that her office had been preparing to ramp up immigration enforcement efforts in Puerto Rico since November. She said they started "reorganizing" resources and "shifting priorities" after Trump's win. Yet the big raid on Jan. 27 came as a surprise to most people. Puerto Rico Gov. Jenniffer González-Colón had reassured immigrants in an interview with Telemundo Puerto Rico that same week that Trump was only "focused on what's happening in Mexico and in the United States, on that border." It helped create a "​​false sense of security," Godreau said. "These consecutive raids then begin in areas historically inhabited by the Dominican population." As immigration authorities escalate their efforts in Puerto Rico byraiding hotels, construction sitesand neighborhoods,more than 500 of the immigrants arrested so farare from the Dominican Republic. Dominicans make up the biggest share of Puerto Rico's immigrant population. Over100,000 Dominicans are estimatedto live in Puerto Rico. About a third are thought to be undocumented. Many of them are business owners or work hospitality, construction andelder care jobs,the last two being industries grappling with labor shortages, Godreau and Martínez said. González-Ramos had said her office would be detaining people illegally present in Puerto Rico, "specifically those whose criminal records pose a threat to our communities and national security." But only 13% of the 732 immigrants arrested this year have a criminal record,according to datafrom Homeland Security Investigations in San Juan. Following a subpoena from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the administration of González-Colón,a Republican who supports Trump,recently handed over the names and addresses of 6,000 people who got driver's licenses under an immigrant-friendly law from 2013 that allowed people without legal immigration status to get them. González-Colón has said shewon't challenge Trump's immigration policiesso as not to risk losing federal funding. "The governor's attitudes and expressions have been quite misleading," Martínez said, adding that local jurisdictions frequently challenge and oppose federal policies in an effort to protect local residents. A spokesperson for Homeland Security Investigations in San Juan told NBC News that González-Ramos was not available for an interview this week. But inher local radio interviewlast week, González-Ramos said immigration agents periodically carry out "daily interventions" in an effort to find over 1,200 people who have final deportation orders "that we must execute." Everyone arrested in raids, regardless of whether they have final orders of deportation or not, "must be detained, no matter what," González-Ramos said in Spanish. "Right now, those are the instructions." The ACLU's Martínez said that in Puerto Rico, immigration arrests have an "aggravating factor": Those immigrants arrested are put on a plane and sent away to detention centers in the mainland U.S. For more than a decade, the island has lacked a working immigration detention center that can permanently house detainees. As immigration arrests ramp up, "temporary detention centers" have sprouted across Puerto Rico, according to González-Ramos. One of them is in a federalGeneral Services Administration buildingin Guaynabo.Equipped with almost 20 beds, it's been nicknamed "la neverita," or the icebox, by immigrants who have spent time there before being transferred to the U.S. An old ICE facility in Aguadilla thatshuttered in 2012was recently reopened to temporarily hold detainees, according to Godreau and Martínez, who have heard from immigrants taken there. Before its closure over a decade ago, "complaints were made at the time about the inhumane and inadequate conditions in which detainees in that center were held," Martínez said in Spanish. Mayor Julio Roldánapproved an ordinance Thursdayto declareAguadilla a "sanctuary city" for immigrantsin response to escalated enforcement efforts in the area. When at least two dozen detainees are at the temporary holding facilities, ICE planes come to Puerto Rico to transport them to permanent detention centers in different states,according to González-Ramos. Many of them are placed in immigration detention centers in Florida and Texas. But detainees from Puerto Rico have also been found in facilities in Louisiana and New Mexico. "We're seeing a pattern of disappearances," Martínez said, pointing out that in Terrero's case, it took the ACLU and her attorney weeks to find out where she was being held. The situation raises concerns over "multiple violations of human rights and civil rights," Martínez said, adding that the ACLU is continuing to monitor these cases and call for changes in local policies to ensure immigrants' rights are protected.

How Trump's policies are reshaping immigration enforcement in Puerto Rico

How Trump's policies are reshaping immigration enforcement in Puerto Rico In Barrio Obrero, a predominantly Dominican neighborhood in Pu...
Bobby Jenks, former White Sox closer and World Series champion, dies at 44New Foto - Bobby Jenks, former White Sox closer and World Series champion, dies at 44

Former Chicago White Sox closer Bobby Jenks died Friday after a battle with Stage 4 adenocarcinoma, a form of stomach cancer. Jenks was 44 years old. The two-time All-Star and 2005 World Series championrevealed his conditionduring a February 2025interview with MLB.comfrom a hospital bed in Portugal, where he moved to be closer to his wife's family. Former Chicago White Sox All-Star pitcher and 2005 World Series Champion Bobby Jenks passed away yesterday, July 4, in Sintra, Portugal, where he had been battling adenocarcinoma, a form of stomach cancer. He was 44 years old.pic.twitter.com/KDb3I0KL66 — Chicago White Sox (@whitesox)July 5, 2025 Jenks spent six of his seven MLB seasons with the White Sox. He posted back-to-back 40-save seasons in 2006 and 2007 and compiled 86 saves over his final three seasons in Chicago, but is most famous on the South Side for closing out the Fall Classic in 2005,with a future pope in attendance for Game 1. During the 2007 season, Jenks retired 47 consecutive batters. He spent the 2011 season, his last in MLB, with the Boston Red Sox. In May 2021, Jenks began working as the pitching coach for the minor-league Grand Junction Rockies. The next season, he was promoted to manager and won the league's Manager of the Year award after helping the team win a championship. Jenks spent the 2023 season as the Princeton WhistlePigs' pitching coach before he returned to managing with the Windy City ThunderBolts later that year. A father of six, Jenks and his wife, Eleni, moved to Portugal in October 2024. Not long after they relocated, he was diagnosed with deep vein thrombosis in his right calf and later dealt with multiple blood clots in his lungs. Early in 2025, he noticed that his energy level was decreasing, and after testing at a local hospital, it was discovered that a tumor had formed in his chest. Jenkstold MLB.comthat the tumor spread into his stomach lining, his bones, his lower back and his hips. As Jenks was dealing with his health battle, his familywas affected by the Palisades fire, which caused them to lose their home and personal belongings, except for his 2005 World Series ring. "I've got one suitcase left to my name," Jenks said. "It's all gone. Everything else I've ever done. I have everything, first to first. All those things are irreplaceable."

Bobby Jenks, former White Sox closer and World Series champion, dies at 44

Bobby Jenks, former White Sox closer and World Series champion, dies at 44 Former Chicago White Sox closer Bobby Jenks died Friday after a b...

 

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