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Criminal Justice Reformers Grapple With DA Pamela Price’s Loss

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Earlier this month, voters in California rolled back a number of criminal justice reforms on the ballot. Los Angeles ousted District Attorney George Gascón, who had been elected on pledges to end cash bail and prioritize violent crime. San Francisco reelected District Attorney Brooke Jenkins, who oversaw a spike in crime in her first year in office after replacing Chesa Boudin after his 2022 recall.

The conventional wisdom came together quickly: “Public safety” had won the day. Crime was up, and reforms were out. Initial takeaways from the results concluded that voters were getting “serious on crime” and proclaimed that the reform push was dead.

In Alameda County, California, the local prosecutor, Pamela Price, who had also pledged to end cash bail and let low-level offenses go uncharged, was ousted in her race — but not because of a huge spike in crime. Oakland, the most populous city in Alameda County, saw a 33 percent drop in homicides this year.

Contrary to the prevailing narrative, the fate of criminal justice reforms throughout the state is more complicated than it seems. California is experiencing historically low levels of crime statewide. Apart from the homicide spike that affected cities and rural areas around the country during the Covid-19 pandemic, crime in California has been relatively steady since the late 1990s.

It was a major shift. In recent years, California had been a bastion of reform. Last year, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the closure of death row at San Quentin State Prison. Legislators passed the Racial Justice Act in 2020, a landmark bill that made it easier to challenge criminal convictions based on evidence of racial bias. And, that same year, Los Angeles voters approved a ballot measure to radically transform the jail system and allocate funding to alternatives to incarceration.

So what changed? Voters had certainly been primed with sensational coverage of shoplifting sprees and horror stories blaming reform-minded DAs for letting offenders off the hook. And outsized spending from corporations, real estate interests, and tech investors helped opponents of reform get their message out.

Money, though, wasn’t the only factor in ousting Price and Gascón or leading voters to oppose abolishing slave labor in prisons, said Anne Irwin, founder and director of the criminal justice policy advocacy group Smart Justice California.

“And the question now is, how should we respond? How can we make voters feel safe and actually be safe?”

“What’s really happening here is the housing crisis and the prevalence of unhoused people on the streets up and down California is creating for people a psychological sense of disorder, which will absolutely, inevitably make them feel unsafe,” Irwin said. “And unless and until we begin to really meaningfully solve our housing crisis and our homelessness crisis, it will be very hard to make Californians feel safe.”

“And the question now is, how should we respond? How can we make voters feel safe and actually be safe?” she said. “We have to meet voters where they are and first and foremost, acknowledge their feelings, especially fear.”

People’s fears, whether rooted in personal experience or influences like news media and ad campaigns, can’t be explained away with data, Irwin said. Whether unfounded or not, people need those feelings validated.

“If we ignore or downplay those feelings, we will lose voters. And we have lost voters because we have downplayed their feelings.”

Price of Fear

In Alameda County, voters who had elected reformer Price as district attorney just two years earlier chose to recall her, an effort that began taking root before Price was elected.

Shortly after Price won her election in 2022, some of the same donors who funded Boudin’s recall shifted their sights to Alameda. They launched a recall campaign just seven months after she took office. In an April interview with The Intercept, Price said wealthy investors funding the recall got involved to protect real estate interests in downtown Oakland.

On Monday, Price conceded the recall results and released a statement listing her accomplishments in office. She touted her prosecutions of murders and violent crimes, which she said came at a higher rate than her predecessor, as well as charges she brought against police for homicide. (The campaign against the recall declined the comment and pointed to Price’s statement.) Those accomplishments, however, hadn’t been enough.

The opposite tack — taking “tough-on-crime” positions — has failed too. The mainstream of the Democratic Party has tried to assuage voters’ fears around crime and safety, but the strategy served to boost opponents of reform, who tend to repeat the same claims sensationalizing crime whether it’s up or down.

Now, just as national Democrats are wrestling with their messaging failures, criminal justice policy advocates are grappling with the fact that plying people with facts isn’t enough to win elections.

Acknowledging where reformers can learn from their mistakes is not the same as capitulating to people who want to bring back the failed strategies of mass incarceration, said Jessica Brand, a strategist who works with reform DAs around the country, including Gascón, the Los Angeles DA who lost his reelection bid by more than 20 points.

“That solution is not mass incarceration — it’s supportive housing and actual treatment beds and economic support.”

“We as a progressive movement need to work harder to implement the robust solutions that actually respond to people’s fears and concerns. These are also, by the way, solutions that we morally need,” Brand said. “That solution is not mass incarceration — it’s supportive housing and actual treatment beds and economic support.”

People turn to the solutions that are readily available even if they no longer work, Brand added, “but we can’t just say those things in places where the problems are prevalent — we have to actually address them or else many people will resort to what they know, and that’s jail and prisons.”

Lessons of “Warm to Reform”

Trends in other parts of the country show that people are still open to reform, as long as it’s packaged in a way that gives people a sense of accountability for crime when it does occur, said Irwin of Smart Justice California. The dynamic was apparent in the campaigns of Proposition 36, which increased sentences for low-level crimes, and Nathan Hochman’s successful bid to unseat Gascón.

“When the proponents of Proposition 36 or Nathan Hochman began to run their races, they pretty quickly realized that while voters want accountability and they want things to change, they do not actually want a wholesale return to mass incarceration,” Irwin said. “That is why Proposition 36 proponents pivoted from their early messaging, which focused on a real tough-on-crime framework, to a ‘mass treatment’ rhetoric.”

Hochman ran as a candidate who was “‘warm to reform,’” Irwin said, adding, “This is a person who had been a lifelong, ‘tough-on-crime’ Republican until just weeks before he filed to run in the attorneys race.” (Hochman’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment.)

Irwin noted that the election was not a clean sweep for “tough-on-crime” opponents of reform.

“That actually didn’t play out at all in the legislative races,” she said.  “The legislature, which is ground zero for policy and budget investment in public safety, is going to play an important role in the coming years in vetting proposed responses to the public sense of lack of safety.”

Election results in other parts of the country belie claims that the push for criminal justice reform has died. Reform-minded prosecutors and sheriffs in Texas, Colorado, Ohio, Georgia, Illinois, and Florida won their races in the face of similar attacks on reform.

California plays an outsized role in the debates about crime and justice reform, but the state is unique in important ways. State laws make it easy to get a recall on the ballot, so reform candidates are more vulnerable to being removed that way.

And the housing crisis and fentanyl boom in California have created an unavoidable sense of disorder and chaos despite steady or decreasing levels of crime. Third, the massive amount of money spent on proxy wars over criminal justice reform in California dwarf similar efforts in other states.

California billionaire and former Republican Los Angeles mayoral candidate Rick Caruso spent more than $100 million on his mayoral campaign, which relied heavily on efforts to attack candidate Karen Bass’s ties to Gascón, the LA district attorney, said Irwin.

“A giant share of that $100 million he spent telling Angelenos that they are not safe, and the reason they are not safe is because of DA Gascón,” she said. “That supercharged the narrative around both safety and DA Gascón in Los Angeles. And even though Rick Caruso failed in his efforts to become LA mayor, he succeeded in his efforts to take down DA Gascón.”

In Alameda County, officials are already making preparations to appoint Price’s replacement. The appointee will hold the office until at least 2026, the next time Alameda voters will have the chance to elect their own DA.

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Summer Lee on the fight of our lives

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As the clock winds down on the Biden presidency, Democrats have a limited window to act. Come January 20, Republicans will control the executive branch and both houses of Congress.

On this week’s episode of The Intercept Briefing, Rep. Summer Lee, D-Pa., acknowledges the need for swift action, particularly on the war in Gaza, prison pardons, and immigration. “I’ve been on calls with advocacy groups around immigration,” she says. President-elect Donald Trump’s promises to conduct mass deportation are “an imminent threat.” 

One tactic she’s employing to drive home the urgency is bringing Dreamers and their stories to meetings. “The people closest to the pain should be closest to the power, closest to the policy solutions. That is not just a cute saying,” Lee says. “It is, I would say, a very lifesaving way of thinking about the policies and the solutions that we have for the very real problems that we face. We can’t keep icing out the people who live it.”

But she is also planning beyond the next eight weeks and is determined to fight the Trump administration. “When you’re playing, it’s Friday night football, it’s raining out, you should not leave that field and your jerseys white. You gotta get dirty,” she says. “Not a single voter wants to see us looking pristine when we’re in the fight for our life right now.”

To hear more about how Lee and her colleagues on the left are planning to handle the next four years, listen to this week’s episode of The Intercept Briefing.

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Trump’s AG Pick Pam Bondi Lobbied for Private Prisons and Amazon

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The nation’s largest private prison company, the GEO Group, has seen its stock soar in the weeks since Donald Trump’s election in anticipation of new contracts linked to mass deportation.

Trump’s new choice for U.S. attorney general, Pam Bondi, worked as GEO’s lobbyist as recently as 2019. Her list of corporate clients also includes Amazon, the tech giant currently embroiled in an antitrust fight with the federal government.

Trump announced his selection of Bondi, the former Florida attorney general, hours after another loyalist of his, Matt Gaetz, withdrew from consideration Thursday under growing scrutiny of allegations that he had sex with a 17-year-old girl.

Bondi will bring her own baggage to the nomination process in the form of a long list of clients she maintained at the powerhouse D.C. lobbying firm Ballard Partners, which also included the Qatari government, General Motors, and the Florida Sheriffs Association, among others.

One critic of the revolving door between politics and lobbying said Bondi’s work for those firms exemplified “the maturation of the political strategy of corporate America and our oligarch class” to spread even more money around beyond campaign donations.

“Pam Bondi surely did work for these clients the past four years, but some of the economic calculus of hiring was for an eventuality like what we’re experiencing, even if the highly placed job of attorney general may not have been foreseen specifically,” said Jeff Hauser, executive director of the Revolving Door Project.

In 2019, Bondi was part of a team lobbying the White House and Department of Homeland Security on behalf of the GEO Group, according to a disclosure form filed with the U.S. House of Representatives. Bondi was already a star in the conservative legal world and had served on Trump’s transition team three years before.

The GEO Group stands to benefit handsomely if Trump’s proposed mass deportations swell the population at its facilities. In one recent corporate earnings call, company officials said it stood to make $400 million extra in revenue per year. The company’s stock has soared more than 100 percent since the day before the election.

The exact nature of Bondi’s work for the GEO Group is not disclosed in the lobbying forms, which downplay the company’s role in shaping immigration policy.

According to the form, the company’s lobbyists are involved in “promoting the use of public-private partnerships in correctional services, including evidence based rehabilitation programs aimed at reducing recidivism. GEO does not advocate for or against criminal justice policy related to the criminalizing certain behaviors or length of criminal sentences, nor does GEO take a position on immigration enforcement policies or detention policies.”

In addition to immigration detainees, the GEO Group’s jails also hold people awaiting criminal trial. The Justice Department was previously an important client for the GEO Group, which operated detention facilities on behalf of the U.S. Marshals Service. In January 2021, President Joe Biden issued an order for the federal government to stop using private prison contracts, though The Intercept reported that the company found ways to keep their contracts alive.

Bondi’s work for two Silicon Valley titans – Amazon and Uber – provides some indication of her approach to the aggressive antitrust stance taken by the Biden administration. 

Gaetz was viewed with alarm by Democrats, who said he was unqualified and poised to turn the Department of Justice into a tool of revenge for Trump.

Still, he also had been greeted with wary optimism by progressives focused on breaking up corporate monopolies, who pointed to Gaetz’s pro-antitrust stance.

The Department of Justice’s antitrust division is a key arm of the government’s antitrust enforcement mechanism, with the staffing and statutory authority to take on big corporations. Under the Biden administration, it has sued Apple, Google, and Live Nation-Ticketmaster, alleging that those companies operated illegal monopolies in their respective markets.

Amazon, Bondi’s client, faced a separate antitrust lawsuit from the Federal Trade Commission.

When Bondi was tapped to help defend Trump against his first round of impeachment charges in 2019, White House officials dismissed the idea that her client roll posed a conflict of interest.

“She’s not here to lobby. She’s here to make sense about how in the world we’re going to impeach or remove a democratically elected president,” White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said at the time.

A Trump transition spokesperson did not immediately respond to request for comment.

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The Intercept’s Lawsuit Against OpenAI Moves Forward

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In an order on Friday, a federal court rejected OpenAI’s effort to toss a lawsuit filed by The Intercept over using its journalists’ work to train ChatGPT without permission or credit.

One of The Intercept’s claims under the Digital Millenium Copyright Act will move forward against OpenAI, although another claim was dismissed, along with all of its claims against Microsoft. 

“This decision shows that the DMCA provides critical safeguards for news organizations against encroachment by AI companies and presents a viable approach to challenging the unauthorized use of digital news content for AI training, regardless of whether that content has been registered with the Copyright Office,” said Matt Topic, The Intercept’s attorney in the litigation and a partner at law firm Loevy + Loevy, in a statement following the order. , which prohibits distributing content knowing that this copyright management information was removed. He also dismissed The Intercept’s claims against Microsoft under both DMCA provisions.

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DC brothers freed after wrongful murder convictions seek presidential pardon

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Two brothers who spent decades in prison after being convicted of a 1984 murder in Washington, D.C., they say they did not commit, are seeking a presidential pardon.

Charles and Chris Turner were convicted as teenagers for the killing of Catherine Fuller in Northeast Washington, D.C. near the intersection of 8th and H Street, Fox 5 DC reported.

They have since been released and are fighting for a pardon that would help restore their rights.

“With the pardon, we get a chance to fix all that and bring a closure to this case once and for all,” Chris Turner told Fox 5 DC.

TWO TEENS ARRESTED IN CONNECTION WITH ROBBERY THAT LEFT BELOVED DC DJ DEAD: ‘WE WILL HOLD YOU ACCOUNTABLE’

Jail cell

Charles and Chris Turner were convicted as teenagers for the killing of Catherine Fuller in Northeast Washington, D.C. near the intersection of 8th and H Street. (iStock)

After decades in custody for a crime which they did not commit, the brothers maintain a positive view on the future and the impact they can have moving forward, stressing that they will not allow their case to mentally hold them back.

“People get upset more that we’re not bitter,” Chris Turner said. “We think if you remain bitter, remain upset about what occurred – even though it was an atrocity and it was injustice – that you stay locked up mentally.”

The case revealed allegations of suppressed evidence, coerced testimony and investigative errors.

Seventeen people were arrested in connection with Fuller’s murder, with eight ultimately convicted, according to Fox 5 DC. The six who are still alive all maintain their innocence after collectively serving more than 200 years behind bars.

HEAD OF DC PRESCHOOL ARRESTED AFTER DIRECTING UNDERCOVER OFFICER ‘TO ABUSE HIS CHILD,’ JUSTICE DEPARTMENT SAYS

Jail

The Turner brothers have become involved in their community and remain hopeful about their futures, although limitations in areas such as career prospects remain due to their felony records.

“We’ve actually said we might join the police force if we didn’t have this on our record … I used to want to be in the Navy. I can’t serve my country because I have a record,” Charles Turner said.

The brothers’ fight for a pardon represents a crucial step in restoring their reputation and rights lost in the convictions.

Handcuffs on man

The case revealed allegations of suppressed evidence, coerced testimony and investigative errors. (iStock)

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Charles Turner said he believes a pardon would bring validation to himself and the other five convicted men, as well as to his family, friends and others who have supported him.

“It would also validate – help to validate – what they know, not what they believe, but what they know. There’s a big difference there,” he said.

Most presidential pardons have been granted between Election Day and Inauguration Day.

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Alabama Executes Inmate Using Controversial Nitrogen Gas Method

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In Alabama, an inmate who was convicted of murder back in 1994 was executed Thursday using a new and controversial method involving nitrogen gas. This marked the third execution in the state this year using nitrogen hypoxia, a method that has stirred up plenty of concerns about whether it causes unnecessary suffering.

What Happened?

Carey Dale Grayson, 50, was put to death at 6:33 p.m. at the state prison in Atmore. He was convicted of a brutal crime from when he was just 19 years old. Grayson and three teenage friends abducted and killed Vickie Deblieux, a 37-year-old hitchhiker, in a horrifying attack. The group had been drinking and doing drugs when they attacked Deblieux, beat her, and even mutilated her body. Grayson received the death penalty, while his co-defendants, who were under 18 at the time, eventually had their sentences reduced to life in prison.

Grayson’s Final Words

Before the execution, Grayson expressed deep regret for the crime. “I’ve been sorry for 30 years,” he said, according to his lawyer, Kacey Keeton. He asked for forgiveness and spoke about how he had repented over the years. However, in his final moments, Grayson also criticized the prison system, accusing officials of being “serial killers.” The microphone was cut off when he used a curse word toward the warden, so witnesses couldn’t hear everything he said.

The Method: Nitrogen Hypoxia

Alabama has been trying out nitrogen hypoxia, a process where inmates breathe pure nitrogen through a mask, cutting off oxygen until they die. It’s an alternative to lethal injection, which has faced problems in recent years due to a shortage of necessary drugs and failed attempts to insert IV lines during executions. However, critics argue that nitrogen hypoxia isn’t the painless method it’s claimed to be.

Grayson’s lawyer, John Palombi, argued that the method risks causing terror and suffering, describing it as similar to suffocation. Reports from previous executions using nitrogen hypoxia back up these concerns. Witnesses said inmates struggled on the gurney, gasped for air, and appeared to writhe in pain during the process.

Despite these warnings, Alabama moved forward with Grayson’s execution. The state has been under pressure to make nitrogen hypoxia work since becoming the first to adopt the method.

The Governor’s Response

Alabama Governor Kay Ivey dismissed calls to halt Grayson’s execution. Critics and protesters had sent petitions urging her to intervene, but Ivey was firm in her decision. “Did Carey Grayson think about the 30 Thanksgivings he stole from Vickie Deblieux and her family?” she asked earlier this month.

After the execution, the governor’s office released a statement calling Grayson’s crimes “heinous and unimaginable” and defending the use of nitrogen hypoxia, saying it was nothing compared to what Deblieux endured.

A Painful History

Grayson’s case is a grim reminder of a brutal crime. In February 1994, Grayson and his friends encountered Deblieux, who was hitchhiking to see her mother in Louisiana. What followed was horrifying. They beat her, threw her off a cliff, and mutilated her body. One of the teens, Louis Mangione, even showed her severed finger to friends, leading to their arrest.

Grayson’s co-defendants were younger—16 and 17 at the time—and avoided the death penalty after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional to execute juveniles. Grayson, however, faced the ultimate punishment.

What’s Next for Nitrogen Hypoxia?

This method of execution is still under heavy scrutiny. Human rights groups and medical experts argue it could prolong suffering if even a small amount of oxygen leaks into the mask. Grayson’s execution adds fuel to the debate, as previous cases have already highlighted the challenges with this untested approach.

Alabama officials maintain that they’re doing their best to carry out executions lawfully. Critics, however, are demanding a full review of the method, hoping to prevent more controversial deaths like this in the future.

Susan Smith’s Chilling Confession: Why the Mother Who Drowned Her Sons Was Denied Parole After 30 Years

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Susan Smith, a South Carolina woman who shocked the nation 30 years ago when she admitted to drowning her two young sons, was denied parole on Wednesday. This was her first time facing the parole board, but their decision was unanimous: she won’t be released.

Through tears, 53-year-old Smith addressed the board via Zoom, expressing deep regret. “What I did was horrible,” she said. “I’d give anything to go back and change it. I love Michael and Alex with all my heart.”

It was October 25, 1994, when Smith, then just 23 years old, drove her car to a nearby lake. Inside were her sons—3-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alexander—strapped into their car seats. Smith let the car roll into the water, drowning both boys.

At first, she didn’t admit what she’d done. Instead, Smith told police a horrifying lie: she claimed a Black man had carjacked her and kidnapped her children. Her then-husband, David Smith, believed her, and the couple even went on TV, pleading for their boys to be brought home.

But by November 3, 1994, Smith’s story fell apart. Confronted by police, she confessed to killing her sons.

During Wednesday’s parole hearing, the board reminded Smith of the massive resources spent searching for her boys during those nine days of lies. They asked what she’d say to the officers and volunteers. “I’m sorry I put them through that,” she said, her voice trembling.

Smith explained that fear, not malice, drove her to lie. “I didn’t know how to tell the people who loved them that they’d never see them again,” she said.

Now a devout Christian, Smith said she has found peace in her faith. “God is a big part of my life,” she told the board. “I know He has forgiven me.”

Her ex-husband, David Smith, doesn’t share that peace. Fighting back tears, he begged the board to deny her parole, describing the deep scars her actions have left.

“This wasn’t some tragic mistake,” he said. “She meant to end their lives.”

David shared how the loss nearly pushed him to take his own life. “She destroyed me,” he said, adding that serving “15 years per child” isn’t nearly enough punishment.

David’s current wife, Tiffany, also pleaded with the board to keep Smith behind bars, describing how the grief still cripples her husband some days. “Michael and Alex didn’t get a chance at life,” she said. “They were given the death penalty.”

Tommy Pope, the prosecutor from Smith’s trial, also weighed in, saying her parole would be premature. “Susan has always focused on Susan,” he said, adding that her crime wasn’t a spur-of-the-moment decision.

During the 1995 trial, the prosecution argued Smith killed her children because she believed they were standing in the way of her love life. They claimed she wanted to be with a man who wasn’t interested in a relationship with a single mom.

Smith’s defense told a different story. They said she’d been suffering from depression after the birth of her second son and had planned to die by suicide, taking her boys with her. But at the last second, they argued, she left the car and let it sink.

Prosecutor Pope dismissed the idea. “She wasn’t wet, and she wasn’t hurt when she went for help,” he said.

Smith’s past also played a significant role in her defense. Her stepfather testified in court that he had sexually abused her for years, painting a picture of a deeply troubled young woman.

In the end, Smith was convicted of the murders but spared the death penalty. She was sentenced to life in prison and became eligible for parole after 30 years.

Since being incarcerated, Smith hasn’t had a spotless record. She’s faced disciplinary action for having inappropriate relationships with prison staff, drug possession, and sharing personal information with a documentary producer.

Smith’s lawyer, Tommy Thomas, told the board her actions stemmed from untreated mental health issues. “This case is about the dangers of untreated depression,” he said, pointing out that she had no prior criminal history. He argued that if paroled, Smith would live with her brother.

But for David Smith, parole will never be an option for his sons. “I will be here every two years,” he vowed, “to make sure their deaths don’t go in vain.”

Jussie Smollett’s Stunning Court Victory: How the Illinois Supreme Court Changed Everything

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Illinois – It’s been a long, dramatic road for Jussie Smollett, the former Empire star accused of staging a hate crime in Chicago back in 2019. But in a major twist, the Illinois Supreme Court has decided to throw out his conviction, saying the whole case was mishandled.

Here’s what happened: Back in January 2019, Smollett told Chicago police he was the victim of a horrifying hate crime. He claimed he was attacked because he’s Black and gay. The story grabbed headlines everywhere, and people were outraged. But soon after, the Chicago Police Department accused Smollett of making the whole thing up, saying he paid two brothers, Ola and Abimbola Osundairo, to fake the attack as a publicity stunt.

Smollett was arrested, faced a whopping 16 charges, and then, in a surprising move, the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office dropped all the charges. They struck a deal: Smollett would give up his $10,000 bond and do some community service, and the case would go away. It seemed like the end—until it wasn’t.

Fast forward to 2020. A special prosecutor, Dan Webb, reopened the case and put Smollett on trial again. This time, Smollett was convicted on five felony counts of lying to police and sentenced to 150 days in jail and 30 months of probation. But his legal team didn’t stop fighting.

Now, in 2024, the Illinois Supreme Court has ruled that Smollett should never have been charged again after that first deal. The judges agreed that once an agreement is made, it has to be honored—no take-backs. They called the whole situation a big public spectacle and said reopening the case was a bad look for the justice system.

Dan Webb, the special prosecutor, wasn’t happy. He argued the ruling wasn’t about Smollett’s innocence but a legal technicality. Smollett’s attorney, Nenye Uche, fired back, calling the whole case unfair and claiming there was never any solid proof against his client.

Smollett, for his part, has always maintained he’s innocent. During his trial, he insisted the attack wasn’t staged and that he really was targeted that night. He even testified about his complicated relationship with one of the Osundairo brothers, saying they were friends who sometimes partied together.

The brothers told a different story. They said Smollett paid them $3,500 to stage the attack and even coached them on how to make it look believable. Smollett’s defense claimed the brothers were just trying to cash in on his fame.

For now, Smollett is breathing a sigh of relief. His lawyer says he’s ready to move on with his life, but the case has left a lasting mark on his career and reputation. What started as a headline-grabbing accusation turned into years of courtroom drama, legal debates, and public scrutiny. Whether people believe Smollett or not, one thing is clear: this saga isn’t something Hollywood—or the public—will forget anytime soon.

Matt Gaetz’s Shocking Withdrawal: Scandals and Senate Pushback Shake Trump’s Team

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In a dramatic turn of events, Matt Gaetz, a former congressman from Florida and one of Donald Trump’s most vocal allies, has pulled his name from consideration to become the next attorney general. The decision, announced Thursday, highlights the challenges Trump faces as he tries to turn his fiery campaign promises into a team that can actually navigate Washington’s political maze.

Gaetz has been a fierce defender of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement, often taking on even his own Republican colleagues. For Trump, Gaetz seemed like the perfect pick—a loyal fighter who shared his combative style. But the choice caused shockwaves in Washington from the moment it was announced eight days ago.

A Scandal-Laden Past

Gaetz’s withdrawal wasn’t just about politics. His past legal troubles—including a Justice Department investigation into sex-trafficking allegations, which ended without charges—already cast a shadow. Then, things got worse. A House Ethics Committee report, not yet officially released, started to leak. It revealed claims from two women who said Gaetz had paid them for sex, along with other allegations of misconduct. These included accusations of drug use, sharing inappropriate images on the House floor, and even obstructing the investigation itself. Gaetz has denied all the accusations and stopped cooperating with the ethics probe earlier this year.

With so much baggage, Senate Republicans were hesitant to back him. According to insiders, at least five GOP senators, including Mitch McConnell and Lisa Murkowski, were ready to vote against him. Gaetz only needed three Republicans to defect for his confirmation to fail.

No Plan, No Backup

Sources close to the situation said Gaetz didn’t have a clear plan to win over skeptics. Even after meeting with 11 senators on Wednesday, the opposition didn’t budge. “He wanted the job but had no real strategy,” one insider said. “It’s not surprising this happened, just that it happened so fast.”

Faced with growing resistance, Gaetz decided to step aside, saying he didn’t want to distract from the Trump administration’s transition. “There is no time to waste on a needlessly protracted Washington scuffle,” Gaetz wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

What This Means for Trump

For Trump, this stumble underscores a recurring problem: picking fights over following the traditional playbook. Gaetz’s scandals weren’t exactly a secret, and better vetting might have avoided the mess. But Trump’s team didn’t consult Senate leadership before making the announcement, leaving many Republicans blindsided.

Now, Trump has tapped Pam Bondi, Florida’s former attorney general, as his new pick for the role. Bondi, known for her strong support of Trump, is expected to face less opposition.

Other Nominees Face Tough Roads

Gaetz isn’t the only Trump pick raising eyebrows. His choices for other Cabinet positions also come with their own controversies. Pete Hegseth, his pick for defense secretary, has been criticized for saying women shouldn’t serve in combat. Anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is Trump’s choice for health and human services secretary, and former Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, who’s been accused of spreading Russian propaganda, is his pick for director of national intelligence. Each of these nominations is likely to spark fierce debates.

A Sigh of Relief at the DOJ

With Gaetz out, many at the Justice Department seemed relieved. “This was like watching the sun rise after a long, dark night,” one official joked.

For Trump, the withdrawal avoids what could have been a bruising confirmation battle. But it also raises questions about how much thought goes into his team’s decisions—and whether his administration can work with Washington rather than constantly fighting against it.

Trump 2.0 and the Wildfire Crisis: What’s Ahead?

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As Donald Trump gears up for his second term in the White House, wildfires are raging across the U.S., sending smoke into the skies over California and even as far as New York and New Jersey. These fiery reminders highlight a growing crisis that shows no signs of slowing down.

Wildfires aren’t just a seasonal nuisance anymore—they’re a year-round challenge. Communities across the country are choking on smoke-filled air, federal firefighters are overworked and underpaid, and insurance costs are soaring. Add to that the devastating toll on homes, landscapes, and lives, and it’s clear this problem needs urgent attention.

But Trump’s track record and plans for the future are raising concerns. Instead of tackling the wildfire problem head-on, his administration seems set on dismantling efforts to address climate change and weakening the agencies that respond to disasters.

The Stakes Are High

During Trump’s first term, he faced several major wildfires, including the devastating Camp Fire in California, which claimed 85 lives in 2020. Yet, his response often missed the mark. Trump famously blamed the fires on poor forest management, telling Californians to “clean their forests” of leaves and broken trees. Meanwhile, that same year, a record 10.2 million acres burned across the U.S.

His remarks—and his administration’s approach—frustrated experts who emphasized the importance of strategic forest management, like controlled burns and protecting old-growth forests. Without these measures, wildfires are more likely to spiral out of control.

As Trump prepares for another term, the risks have only grown. Some hope he’ll streamline processes to speed up forest treatments, but others worry his plans could do more harm than good, like pushing timber sales over more effective fire prevention strategies.

Federal Firefighters Are Burning Out

One major concern is the state of federal firefighters, who are often the first line of defense against these blazes. They work grueling hours, risk their lives, and earn paychecks that sometimes rival those of fast-food workers. Many are leaving their jobs, frustrated by low wages and lack of support.

President Biden had temporarily raised their pay, but those increases are set to expire soon. If Trump and a Republican-led Congress don’t make those raises permanent, many more firefighters could walk away, leaving the U.S. even more vulnerable during fire season.

“We need a well-staffed, well-funded team to fight these fires year-round,” says Jonathan Golden from Grassroots Wildland Firefighters. “But that’s at risk if changes aren’t made.”

Natural Disasters on the Rise

The U.S. has seen an alarming rise in billion-dollar natural disasters. In 2023, there were 28 such events—a record-breaking number. With 2024 not even over, we’re already at 24.

Trump has a history of using disaster aid as a political tool. During his first term, he threatened to withhold wildfire funding from Democratic-leaning states like California. This time around, there’s worry he’ll cut funding further, shifting the burden of disaster response to state and local governments.

Under plans like Project 2025, Trump’s team has suggested scaling back federal disaster aid, limiting who can access funds, and even tying aid to policies that align with Trump’s agenda. These changes could leave states like California scrambling to manage fires without the necessary resources.

Science and Preparedness Under Fire

Trump’s skepticism about climate change is well-documented, and his cabinet picks suggest that his administration will double down on deregulation. For example, Lee Zeldin, his choice for the Environmental Protection Agency, and Doug Burgum, tapped for the Department of the Interior, are expected to roll back environmental protections and prioritize resource extraction over climate action.

There are also fears that Trump might dismantle key science-focused agencies, like the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which provides crucial weather forecasting. Without their expertise, responding to wildfires and other disasters will become much harder.

“This isn’t just a repeat of Trump’s first term,” warns Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California. “This time, the damage could be deeper and harder to undo.”

What’s Next?

While some states like California are stepping up their own wildfire prevention efforts, such as investing billions in mitigation and landscape treatments, wildfires don’t respect state borders. Without federal support, the whole country will feel the impact of a warming planet and rising disaster risks.

Experts stress that the stakes couldn’t be higher. “Climate change is a massive crisis, and we don’t have time to waste,” says Julia Stein from UCLA. “Federal inaction will have national and global consequences.”

As Trump’s second term unfolds, the question remains: Will his administration take the wildfire crisis seriously, or will their policies fan the flames even further?