Trump administration launches immigration crackdown in Massachusetts, reports sayNew Foto - Trump administration launches immigration crackdown in Massachusetts, reports say

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Trump administration has launched an operation in Massachusetts to arrest and deport undocumented immigrants, the New York Times and Boston media reported on Saturday, quoting the Department of Homeland Security as saying it was targeting "criminal aliens" living in the state. DHS and its U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arm are calling the operation Patriot 2.0, modifying the name of a May deportation surge that led to the arrest of 1,500 people in the state, according to the reports. A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The operation is expected to last several weeks, the New York Times said, quoting unnamed sources with knowledge of the matter. One of the sources told the Times that Patriot 2.0 was focused on targeting immigrants who had been released from custody despite ICE agents attempting to pick them up from local jails. It was not immediately clear how many federal officers were involved in the crackdown, which comes as Chicago braces for a Trump administration ramp-up of deportations in the third-largest U.S. city. NBC 10 Boston quoted a statement from a DHS spokesperson as deriding Boston Mayor Michelle Wu's so-called sanctuary policies. "Sanctuary policies like those pushed by Mayor Wu not only attract and harbor criminals but also place these public safety threats above the interests of law-abiding American citizens. ICE is arresting sex offenders, pedophiles, murderers, drug dealers, and gang members released by local authorities," the statement reported by NBC 10 said. (Reporting by David Lawder, Editing by Nick Zieminski)

Trump administration launches immigration crackdown in Massachusetts, reports say

Trump administration launches immigration crackdown in Massachusetts, reports say WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Trump administration has launche...
Trump's former surgeon general calls for RFK Jr. to be firedNew Foto - Trump's former surgeon general calls for RFK Jr. to be fired

Jerome Adams, who served as US surgeon general during President Donald Trump's first administration, is calling for Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be fired as controversy continues to swirl over his handling of vaccine approvals. When asked by CNN's Victor Blackwell on Saturday if Trump should fire Kennedy, Adams said, "I absolutely believe that he should for the sake of the nation and the sake of his legacy." Adams' comments come after acontentious hearingon Capitol Hill earlier this week, where Kennedy was grilled by both Democrats and Republicans about his views on vaccines and the recentexodus at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, including the resignation of its director, over tighter vaccine policies Kennedy was pushing. "I'm deeply concerned about the health and safety of our nation under RFK's current leadership," Adams told Blackwell, later adding: "I absolutely believe he is uniquely damaging the credibility of federal agencies like the CDC, (National Institutes of Health, Food and Drug Administration) and he's putting us at risk." The former surgeon general also raised concerns about Trump's close relationship with Kennedy, arguing that the president should take charge of health policy. "I'm just flabbergasted, to be honest, that he seems to have President Trump in a thrall," Adams said. "President Trump is clearly the leader on foreign policy, clearly the leader on the economy and tariffs. But when it comes to health he's doing whatever RFK says." Yet, Adams said he is "hopeful" that Trump will recognize what he described as "the danger" Kennedy poses. "I still am hopeful that President Trump will begin to see the danger that is being presented — not just to America, but to his own legacy — by continuing to have RFK in this position, making these horrific decisions," Adams told Blackwell. During Thursday's congressional hearing, Kennedy defended the changes at the CDC, claiming that they "were absolutely necessary adjustments to restore the agency to its role as the world's gold standard public health agency." When Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren argued that last month's decision by the FDA — which falls under Kennedy's purview — is effectively denying some people access toupdated Covid-19 vaccinesafter only approving it for a limited group of people, Kennedy cast doubt on the efficacy of the vaccine. "I'm not going to recommend a product for which there's no clinical data for that indication. Is that what I should be doing?"Kennedy asked Warren. Following the hearing,Trump praised Kennedy's performance, saying that while he didn't watch the hearing, "I heard he did very well today." But on Friday Trump appeared to distance himself from Florida's decision to eliminate school vaccine requirements, that all people should get certain vaccines. "I think you have to be very careful when you say that some people don't have to be vaccinated," he said. "You have vaccines that work, they just pure and simple work. They're not controversial at all, and I think those vaccines should be used, otherwise some people are going to catch it, and they endanger other people." CNN's Adam Cancryn contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump’s former surgeon general calls for RFK Jr. to be fired

Trump's former surgeon general calls for RFK Jr. to be fired Jerome Adams, who served as US surgeon general during President Donald Trum...
Ivan Ivanov and Jeline Vandromme win US Open junior titlesNew Foto - Ivan Ivanov and Jeline Vandromme win US Open junior titles

NEW YORK (AP) — Jeline Vandromme andIvan Ivanovadded new trophies to their collections Saturday, capturing theU.S. Openjunior boys and girls titles in straight sets. Vandromme took down Swedish qualifier Lea Nilsson 7-6 (2), 6-2 in the girls' draw, overcoming an early deficit and fighting through a tie break to take the first set before speeding out to grab the second. "I don't think I can believe it yet," Vandromme said on court after the win. "I'm super happy with my week here, with the level I showed," The Belgian player was on a hot streak in New York this year, upsetting No. 2 Hannah Klugman and No. 3 Kristina Penickova on her way to the final. On the boys' side, reigning Wimbledon boys' champion Ivanov handily added another Slam title to his growing list of accolades. The No. 1 seed took down fellow countryman Alexander Vasilev 7-5, 6-3 in an all-Bulgarian match-up celebrated by numerous Bulgarian flags in the stan ds. "Full Bulgarian final and full Bulgarian crowd," Ivanov said with a smile. "I'm very happy that this happened, and I'm very happy that I took success today." In doubles, sisters Alena Kovackova and Jana Kovackova took the win over Vandromme and her partner, Laima Vladson, while Keaton Hance and Jack Kennedy won the boys' title over Noah Johnston and Benjamin Willwerth in an All-American final. ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Ivan Ivanov and Jeline Vandromme win US Open junior titles

Ivan Ivanov and Jeline Vandromme win US Open junior titles NEW YORK (AP) — Jeline Vandromme andIvan Ivanovadded new trophies to their collec...
No. 11 Illinois takes over after halftime to beat mistake-prone Duke 45-19 for road winNew Foto - No. 11 Illinois takes over after halftime to beat mistake-prone Duke 45-19 for road win

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Luke Altmyer threw for 296 yards and three touchdowns and No. 11 Illinois capitalized on a series of mistakes by Duke to beat the Blue Devils 45-19 on Saturday for a road win against a power-conference opponent. Kaden Feagin, Hank Beatty and Ca'Lil Valentine ran for scores, while Beatty also had a huge receiving day with eight catches for 128 yards for the Fighting Illini (2-0). Illinois led by just one at halftime but asserted itself from there and outscored Duke 31-6 in what turned into a dominating finish. "It was really cool to kind of have some hurdles to climb over in the first half," Altmyer said, adding: "We know if we do the right things, we're a really good team." The key, though was Illinois' opportunism in pouncing on every Duke mistake when the game was close — and boy, there were plenty. Duke (1-1) committed five turnovers, notably a muffed punt deep in its own end to set up a short field on Illinois' first touchdown and Darian Mensah losing a red-zone fumble in the first half. The miscues also included a penalty for having two players in the game wearing a No. 8 jersey as Illinois punted on a three-and-out to open the second half. That led to a first down on a drive the Illini would ultimately take to the end zone, with Altmyer's 4-yard scoring throw to Justin Bowick for a 21-13 lead that ultimately proved to be merely the start of Illinois' surge. "Unfortunately in the second half, we were still the architects of our own demise," Duke coach Manny Diaz said, referring to the penalty as essentially a sixth turnover. Mensah threw for 334 yards and two touchdowns for Duke. Both went to Andrel Anthony, including a spectacular grab in the back of the end zone with Anthony getting his right toe down barely inbounds 8 seconds before halftime to make it 14-13. The takeaway Illinois: This is a quality win that could boost their AP Top 25 standing, coming against a nine-win team from last year. After being outgained 240-132 while allowing four sacks before halftime, Illinois rolled to 287 yards while allowing no sacks after the break. Duke: The Blue Devils officially have a problem through two games: a minus-6 turnover margin with no takeaways. Punch-out Illinois coach Bret Bielema said he showed his players a clip of roughly seven or eight plays from last year showing Blue Devils players having the ball punched out for turnovers, highlighting potential issues with ball security. Defensive back Matthew Bailey used that tip perfectly when the game was still in doubt. Trailing 21-13, Mensah found Sahmir Hagans for a short pass to the left, and Hagans cut inside a defender to get loose and cross midfield. But Bailey closed on Hagans and punched the ball loose as he made contact near the sideline, with teammate Kaleb Patterson making a scrambling crawl to pounce on the ball for the turnover. "It tells a lot being able to come out there and finish the job, especially away and how we did," Bailey said. Up next Illinois: The Illini host Western Michigan on Saturday. Duke: The Blue Devils visit Tulane on Saturday in a reunion for Mensah with his former program. ___ AP college football:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-football

No. 11 Illinois takes over after halftime to beat mistake-prone Duke 45-19 for road win

No. 11 Illinois takes over after halftime to beat mistake-prone Duke 45-19 for road win DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Luke Altmyer threw for 296 yards...
Biden chooses Delaware for his presidential library as his team turns to raising money for itNew Foto - Biden chooses Delaware for his presidential library as his team turns to raising money for it

WASHINGTON (AP) — Former PresidentJoe Bidenhas decided to build his presidential library in Delaware and has tapped a group of former aides, friends and political allies to begin the heavy lift of fundraising and finding a site for the museum and archive. The Joe and Jill Biden Foundation this past week approved a 13-person governance board that is charged with steering the project. The board includes former Secretary of StateAntony Blinken, longtime adviserSteve Ricchetti,prolific Democratic fundraiser Rufus Gifford and others with deep ties to the one-term president and his wife. Biden's library team has the daunting task of raising money for the 46th president's legacy project at a moment when his party has become fragmented about the way ahead and manybig Democratic donors have stopped writing checks. It also remains to be seen whether corporations and institutional donors that have historically donated topresidential library projects— regardless of the party of the former president — will be more hesitant to contribute, with PresidentDonald Trumpmaligning Bidenon a daily basis and savaging groups he deems left-leaning. The political climate has changed "There's certainly folks — folks who may have been not thinking about those kinds of issues who are starting to think about them," Gifford, who was named chairman of the library board, told The Associated Press. "That being said ... we're not going to create a budget, we're not going to set a goal for ourselves that we don't believe we can hit." The cost of presidential libraries has soared over the decades. The George H.W. Bush library's construction cost came in at about $43 million when it opened in 1997. Bill Clinton's cost about $165 million. George W. Bush's team met its $500 million fundraising goal before the library was dedicated. The Obama Foundation has seta whopping $1.6 billion fundraising goalfor construction, sustaining global programming and seeding an endowment for the Chicago presidential center that is slated to open next year. Biden's library team is still in the early stages of planning, but Gifford predicted that the cost of the project would probably "end up somewhere in the middle" of the Obama Presidential Center and the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum. Biden advisers have met with officials operating 12 of the 13 presidential libraries with a bricks and mortar presence that the National Archives and Records Administration manages. (They skipped the Herbert Hoover library in Iowa, which is closed for renovations.) They've also met Obama library officials to discuss programming and location considerations and have begun talks with Delaware leaders to assess potential partnerships. Private money builds them Construction and support for programming for the libraries are paid for with private funds donated to the nonprofit organizations established by the former president. The initial vision is for the Biden library to include an immersive museum detailing Biden's four years in office. The Bidens also want it to be a hub for leadership, service and civic engagement that will include educational and event space to host policy gatherings. Biden, who ended his bid for a second White House term 107 days before last year's election, has been relatively slow to move on presidential library planning compared with most of his recent predecessors. Clinton announced Little Rock, Arkansas, would host his library weeks into his second term. Barack Obama selected Jackson Park on Chicago's South Side as the site for his presidential center before he left office, and George W. Bush selected Southern Methodist University in Dallas before finishing his second term. One-termer George H.W. Bush announced in 1991, more than a year before he would lose his reelection bid, that he would establish his presidential library at Texas A&M University after he left office. Donald Trumptaps legal settlements for his Trump was mostly quiet aboutplans for a presidential libraryafter losing to Biden in 2020 and has remained so since his return to the White House this year. But the Republican has won millions of dollars in lawsuits againstParamount Global,ABC News, Meta and X in which parts of those settlements are directed for a future Trump library. Trump has also accepted a free Air Force One replacementfrom the Qatar government.He says the $400 million plane would be donated to his future presidential library, similar to how the Boeing 707 used by President Ronald Reagan was decommissioned and put on display as a museum piece, once he leaves office. Others named to Biden's library board are former senior White House aides Elizabeth Alexander, Julissa Reynoso Pantaleón andCedric Richmond; David Cohen, a former ambassador to Canada and telecom executive; Tatiana Brandt Copeland, a Delaware philanthropist; Jeff Peck, Biden Foundation treasurer and former Senate aide; Fred C. Sears II, Biden's longtime friend; former Labor Secretary Marty Walsh; former Office of Management and Budget director Shalanda Young; and former Delaware Gov. Jack Markell. Biden has deep ties to Pennsylvania but ultimately settled on Delaware, the state that was the launching pad for his political career. He was first elected to the New Castle County Council in 1970 and spent 36 years representing Delaware in the Senate before serving as Obama's vice president. Following his vice presidency, helaunched the Biden Institute,a research and policy center focused on domestic issues at the University of Delaware. Biden graduated from the university in 1965. The president was born inScranton, Pennsylvania,where he lived until age 10. He left when his father, struggling to make ends meet, moved the family to Delaware after landing a job there selling cars. Working-class Scranton became a touchstone in Biden's political narrative during his long political career. He also served as a professor at theUniversity of Pennsylvaniaafter his vice presidency, leading a center on diplomacy and global engagement at the school named after him. Gifford said ultimately the Bidens felt that Delaware was where the library should be because the state has "propelled his entire political career." Elected officials in Delaware are cheering Biden's move. "To Delaware, he will always be our favorite son," Gov. Matt Meyer said. "The new presidential library here in Delaware will give future generations the chance to see his story of resilience, family, and never forgetting your roots."

Biden chooses Delaware for his presidential library as his team turns to raising money for it

Biden chooses Delaware for his presidential library as his team turns to raising money for it WASHINGTON (AP) — Former PresidentJoe Bidenhas...
Trump debuts 'Rose Garden Club' for DC insiders after he paved iconic White House spotNew Foto - Trump debuts 'Rose Garden Club' for DC insiders after he paved iconic White House spot

PresidentDonald Trumpdebuted thenewly paved Rose Gardenpatio in a Sept. 5 dinner for Washington insiders that he branded the "Rose Garden Club." Speaking to dinner guests on the patio paved in white concrete, formerly a grassy lawn, Trumpsaidthe "Rose Garden Club" will admit members of Congress, senators and "people that can bring peace and success to our country." Trump said he would havehosted a group of top level tech mogulswho attended a lavish White House dinner the night before on the new Rose Garden patio, but the weather prevented it. More:'The robots are here'. Melania Trump highlights AI as tech titans gather at White House Metal tables and chairs along with yellow umbrellas decorate a paved over historic White House Rose Garden lawn on August 16, 2025 in Washington, DC. "They didn't want to have rain on top of their beautiful heads," Trump said of the group, which included Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Meta, formerly Facebook, Apple CEO Tim Cook and OpenAI founder Sam Altman.Elon Musk, who played a massive role in the first months of the second Trump administration leading the slashing of federal agencies, was absent. The tech magnates "could have endured a little rain, but I wanted you to be number one," Trump cooed to the tables of Washington insiders. Trump adviser Steven Cheungannouncedthe "club" opening on social media with a picture of a gold embossed stationary sheet reading "The Rose Garden Club at the White House" sitting next to a polished silverware set. Earlier this summer, Trump unveiled plans to pave over the Rose Garden, a historic spot outside the Oval Office that has served as thebackdrop of historic presidential momentsfor more than a century. The old garden, he told reporters on Aug. 3, was "always wet and damp." "When we had a press conference, you'dsink into the mud," he told reporters. "If it rained it would take three, four, five days to dry out and we couldn't use it really for the intended purpose." More:President Trump targets Washington DC's 'old, tired, exhausted' grass amid takeover The new design is reminiscent of the patio at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's luxury South Florida club. Yellow and white-striped umbrellas installed at the tables earlier this summer also added to the resemblance. More:War on weeds? Leaf-blowing, mulch-shoveling National Guard get green thumbs in DC parks The umbrellas were taken down for the "club" dinner, according to a picture posted on the White House's official X account. The picture showed suited-up diners seated on yellow cushions at around two dozen tables spaced out across the white concrete plaza. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump debuts 'Rose Garden Club' after iconic White House spot paved

Trump debuts 'Rose Garden Club' for DC insiders after he paved iconic White House spot

Trump debuts 'Rose Garden Club' for DC insiders after he paved iconic White House spot PresidentDonald Trumpdebuted thenewly paved R...
Young Phillies fan rewarded with gift bag from Marlins, signed Harrison Bader bat after viral confrontationNew Foto - Young Phillies fan rewarded with gift bag from Marlins, signed Harrison Bader bat after viral confrontation

All's well that ends well for a young fan of the Philadelphia Phillies. While attending the Phillies game at the Miami Marlins, the fan had to give up a home run ball after a viral confrontation, but was later rewarded by both teams. In the top of the fourth inning, outfielder Harrison Bader hit a solo homer to increase Philadelphia's lead to 5-1. As the homer went into the stands, the boy's father scrambled to grab the ball, giving it to his son. But a woman, who is also a Phillies fan, ran over to express her anger in a video clip that went viral online. Fan footagefrom the standsshows the woman saying, "You took it from me," accusing the father of stealing the ball from her part of the section. The father eventually gave in and gave the woman the ball in order to end the confrontation, plucking it from his son's glove. It didn't take long for the Marlins organization to approach the fan, who was there celebrating his birthday, and give him a gift bag as an apology for the incident. The Marlins gave this young fan some gifts after the woman took the ball from him and the crowd cheered. He is at the game celebrating his birthdaypic.twitter.com/zZaxqTxh1Dhttps://t.co/STpDlVmThZ — Jomboy Media (@JomboyMedia)September 6, 2025 And after the game, the Phillies made it right too. The fan got to meet Bader, and got a signed bat from the center fielder as well — an epic birthday gift. Going home with a signed bat from Baderpic.twitter.com/pCaXHSjLgL — Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies)September 6, 2025 The Phillies went on towin the game 9-3to start the weekend series. After homers from Max Kepler in the second, and Brandon Marsh and Bader in the fourth, Bryson Stott sealed the deal with a three-run homer in the top of the seventh. Philadelphia, which sits comfortably at the top of the NL East, will play two more games against the Marlins before heading back home to play the New York Mets.

Young Phillies fan rewarded with gift bag from Marlins, signed Harrison Bader bat after viral confrontation

Young Phillies fan rewarded with gift bag from Marlins, signed Harrison Bader bat after viral confrontation All's well that ends well fo...

 

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