Senate confirms former Fox News host Pirro as top federal prosecutor for the nation's capitalNew Foto - Senate confirms former Fox News host Pirro as top federal prosecutor for the nation's capital

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate has confirmed former Fox News host Jeanine Pirro as the top federal prosecutor for the nation's capital, filling the post after PresidentDonald Trumpwithdrew his controversial first pick, conservative activist Ed Martin Jr. Pirro, a former county prosecutor and elected judge, was confirmed 50-45. Before becoming the acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia in May, she co-hosted the Fox News show "The Five" on weekday evenings, where she frequently interviewed Trump. Trump yanked Martin's nomination after akey Republican senatorsaid he could not support him due to Martin's outspoken support for rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Martin now serves as the Justice Department's pardon attorney. In 2021, voting technology companySmartmatic USAsued Fox News, Pirro and others for spreading false claims that the company helped "steal" the 2020 presidential election from Trump. The company's libel suit, filed in a New York state court, sought $2.7 billion from the defendants. Last month, Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee voted unanimously to send Pirro's nomination to the Senate floor after Democrats walked out to protestEmil Bove's nominationto become a federal appeals court judge. Pirro, a 1975 graduate of Albany Law School, has significantly more courtroom experience than Martin, who had never served as a prosecutor or tried a case before taking office in January. She was elected as a judge in New York's Westchester County Court in 1990 before serving three terms as the county's elected district attorney. In the final minutes of his first term as president, Trump issued a pardon to Pirro's ex-husband, Albert Pirro, who was convicted in 2000 on conspiracy and tax evasion charges.

Senate confirms former Fox News host Pirro as top federal prosecutor for the nation’s capital

Senate confirms former Fox News host Pirro as top federal prosecutor for the nation's capital WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate has confirmed...
'Change agent': Charlamagne tha God floats Jon Stewart as possible 2028 candidateNew Foto - 'Change agent': Charlamagne tha God floats Jon Stewart as possible 2028 candidate

WASHINGTON - Radio show host Charlamagne tha God suggested that comedian Jon Stewart should run for president in 2028, after questioning a possible run for president again by former Vice PresidentKamala Harris. His comments come after Harrissaid she won't runfor California governor, leaving the door open for a potential 2028 run. In an interview set to publish Aug. 2, Charlamagne told Fox News' Lara Trump, daughter-in-law of PresidentDonald Trump, that Stewart would be a "change agent coming from the outside" that would "shake things up." Stewart has been critical of Donald Trump's policies and holds progressive viewpoints. He's been a vocal advocate of improving healthcare access for veterans and first responders. He anchored Comedy Central's The Daily Show from 1999 to 2015, andlater returned as a part-time hostin 2024. "We've seen him get legislation and stuff, you know, passed before, like we know where his heart is. He'd be somebody I'd like to see really get in the race and disrupt things in 2028," Charlamagne told Lara Trump. Charlamagne, co-host of The Breakfast Club, said in an episode of his show on July 31 that he doesn't know if Harris should run again in 2028. "I definitely would like to see her write a book. I definitely would like to see her start a podcast and just build a real connection with people," he said. Harris said on July 30 that her leadership and public service "will not be in elected office" for now. Harris iscurrently writing a book, two people with knowledge of her plans said, and is expected to go on tour. Contributing: Francesca Chambers, USA TODAY This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Charlamagne tha God tells Lara Trump he likes Jon Stewart for 2028

'Change agent': Charlamagne tha God floats Jon Stewart as possible 2028 candidate

'Change agent': Charlamagne tha God floats Jon Stewart as possible 2028 candidate WASHINGTON - Radio show host Charlamagne tha God s...
Celtics minority owner to buy WNBA's Connecticut Sun, with potential move to BostonNew Foto - Celtics minority owner to buy WNBA's Connecticut Sun, with potential move to Boston

Boston Celticsminority owner Steve Pagliuca has reached a deal to buy the WNBA'sConnecticut Sunand move the team to Boston,reports the Boston Globe. Pagliuca and his group will pay $325 million for the team, a record-setting purchase for a WNBA franchise, with plans to relocate the team from the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut. According to the report, Pagliuca will also contribute $100 million for a new practice facility. The team plans to play its home games at TD Garden, home to theCelticsand the NHL'sBoston Bruins, and hopes to as soon as the 2027 season. Any sale of a WNBA franchise needs to be approved by the league and the governors of each team. The league has been expanding in the past few years, with theGolden State Valykriesbeginning play this year. The Toronto Tempo will begin play in the 2026 season, with expansion to 18 teams by 2030, with franchises coming to Portland, Cleveland, Detroit, and Philadelphia. There have been reports that the WNBA wants to wait until 2033 to potentially seek Boston as an expansion city for a new team. "Relocation decisions are made by the WNBA Board of Governors and not by individual teams. As part of our most recent expansion process, in which three new franchises were awarded to Cleveland, Detroit and Philadelphia on June 30, 2025, nine additional cities also applied for WNBA teams and remain under active consideration," the WNBA said in a statement. "No groups from Boston applied for a team at that time and those other cities remain under consideration based on the extensive work they did as part of the expansion process and currently have priority over Boston. Celtics' prospective owner Bill Chisholm has also reached out to the league office and asked that Boston receive strong consideration for a WNBA franchise at the appropriate time." The Sun has been in Connecticut since 2003, relocating from Orlando as the franchise began as the Miracle in 1999. "I know the quickest way to get a team to Boston is for the Sun to move to Boston," Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey told the Boston Globe. "And I don't want to wait [until 2033]. I don't want Boston or New England to have to wait that long. We've got an incredibly enthusiastic, energized base here that wants to see a 'W' team in Boston and to me this seems to be in everybody's best interests." Mohegan Sun Arena, located inside the Mohegan Sun casino resort, seats 10,000 for basketball. In the past two seasons, the Sun played a regular-season game apiece at Boston's TD Garden, both to sell-out crowds. The Garden has a capacity of 19,000 for basketball. Connecticut most recently went to the WNBA Finals in 2019 and 2022 and has been to the playoffs in each of the past eight seasons, the league's longest active postseason appearance streak. This season, the Sun have the WNBA's worst record at 5-21. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Celtics minority owner reaches deal to buy Connecticut Sun

Celtics minority owner to buy WNBA's Connecticut Sun, with potential move to Boston

Celtics minority owner to buy WNBA's Connecticut Sun, with potential move to Boston Boston Celticsminority owner Steve Pagliuca has reac...
Rahaman Ali, Muhammad Ali's Brother and Former Professional Boxer, Dies at 82New Foto - Rahaman Ali, Muhammad Ali's Brother and Former Professional Boxer, Dies at 82

AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley Rahaman Ali, Muhammad Ali's younger brother, died on Friday, Aug. 1, at the age of 82 Rahaman, who was a professional boxer in his own right, helped Muhammad train throughout his career A cause of death has not been released at this time Rahaman Ali,Muhammad Ali's younger brother and a professional boxer, has died. He was 82. Muhammad died on Friday, Aug. 1, according to astatementfrom the Muhammad Ali Center, shared on Facebook on Saturday, Aug. 2. A cause of death has not been released at this time. "You can't tell Muhammad's story without mentioning Rahaman," DeVone Holt, president and CEO of the Muhammad Ali Center, said in the statement. "He was one of the most constant sources of support for Muhammad during this career, and their relationship was a true example of what it means to be 'my brother's keeper.' " Robinson/EMPICS via Getty Rahaman, who was born on July 18, 1943, followed in his older brother's footsteps and became a professional boxer. He won "14 out of his 18 professional bouts" between 1964 and 1972, per the Center. After retiring from his own boxing career, Rahaman began traveling with Muhammad, supporting his brother and helping him train. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Rahaman wrote two books about his time boxing with his brother: 2014'sThat's Muhammad Ali's Brother! My Life on the Undercard(which was co-authored by boxing writer and columnist H. Ron Brashear) and 2019'sMy Brother, Muhammad Ali – The Definitive Biography. David R. Lutman/Getty Muhammad's daughter Hana Ali posted atributeto her late uncle on Facebook on Friday, writing, "Today, the last living member of my father's immediate family returned to heaven." She continued, "My Uncle Rahman, lovingly known as Rock, was a sweet, gentle soul with a heart as big as the world. He had that same sparkle in his eye that my father had… that same light, that same mischief, that same love." "Uncle Rock had a heart of gold. He never needed a spotlight to shine, and I believe that now, from above, he and Daddy are part of something bigger… something beautiful… something meant to help heal this broken world," she added. Muhammad's daughter Laila Ali shared a tribute to her uncle onInstagram, writing, "My father loved his brother Rahaman so deeply. They are now back in the arms of their beloved parents. May they all rest in eternal peace together." Muhammaddied in 2016at the age of 74 after a 32-year battle with Parkinson's disease. Read the original article onPeople

Rahaman Ali, Muhammad Ali's Brother and Former Professional Boxer, Dies at 82

Rahaman Ali, Muhammad Ali's Brother and Former Professional Boxer, Dies at 82 AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley Rahaman Ali, Muhammad Ali's...
Wife of Marine veteran released from ICE detention after 2 monthsNew Foto - Wife of Marine veteran released from ICE detention after 2 months

BATON ROUGE, La. — Awife of a Marine Corps veteran and mother of twowas released from ICE custody on Monday after being detained in May during what she says she thought was a routine immigration office visit, she and her husband tell CBS News. "I feel like a mom again, because well, I was, at some points, I was feeling guilty, like I failed my kids, because I was, you know, without them," Paola Clouatre, 25, said in a phone interview Thursday. Asked how she feels being reunited with her husband and children, she said, "It feels good — good to be back with my family and my babies." She had just given birth to their second child and was still breastfeeding when she was detained on May 27. She was taken to an ICE detention facility in northern Louisiana, about four hours away from their Baton Rouge home. Her husband, Adrian Clouatre, would drive eight hours round-trip each week to visit with their infant daughter and 2-year-old son. "It was very difficult," Paola said. "They gave me a pump so I could pump milk and continue producing milk for when the baby came to be able to give it to her." Adrian Clouatre, 26, served in the Marine Corps for five years as an intelligence analyst. He said his wife was put in handcuffs in the lobby of an immigration enforcement field office in New Orleans after wrapping up a meeting with a staffer from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services about her green card application. "I was furious," he said in an interview with CBS News in June about the arrest. "I felt betrayed. They told us we passed the interview. ... They knew I was a veteran, they knew that my wife was breastfeeding our 9-week-old daughter, they knew we had two kids. ... I cried the whole way to my car after I left the building." Asked about the conditions she experienced during her time inside the detention facility, Paola said, "It's difficult to be there, because they have a lot of rules. They are very strict. So it's very, very, hard to be there." But this week, Adrian said he finally got the call he'd been hoping for — his wife said she was going to be released, and he needed to make the drive one last time to pick her up. "She called me from a CPO [officer's] phone, like one of the ICE agent's phones," he said. Paola said she didn't meet anyone else detained inside the facility who had a military family member or who was still breastfeeding. The couple met when he was still in the service in California, and they married in 2024. Adrian says his wife now wears a monitor on her ankle, as part of her condition of release on a recognizance bond, and has to check in every two weeks with an ICE parole officer. The couple had one such appointment Thursday morning. "It was good to meet him today in the morning," Paola said about meeting with the parole officer assigned to her case. "He is a nice person." Paola says she and her mother came to the U.S. from Mexico when she was a child, but her mother abandoned her when she was still a teenager, leaving Paola homeless. She said she hadn't spoken to her mother in years. It wasn't until this spring that she learned her mother had skipped a 2018 immigration hearing, and she says she had "no idea" the federal government had issued a deportation order against both of them as a result. "There was no way for her to know about the removal order," Adrian said. Adrian said they thought they were going through the proper channels to obtain a green card for Paola after their marriage, and the process had previously gone smoothly. Instead, Paola became one of tens of thousands of people in custody and facing deportation as theTrump administration pushesfor immigration officers to arrest 3,000 people a day. As of June 27,arrests by ICEduring President Trump's second term had reached 109,000 — an increase of about 120% from the same time period in 2024 under President Biden — according to a CBS News analysis of government data. The majority of those arrests took place in border and Southern states, figures show. The couple's attorney, Carrey Holliday, a former immigration judge, said Paola's detention was unreasonable. "There are lots of reasons why this shouldn't have happened. No. 1, Adrian, her husband, is a marine veteran, discharged honorably. She's the mother of two small children, and was nursing one," Holliday said. "She really didn't know that she had an order of removal outstanding until about a week before she had an interview for a green card. They were trying to do things legally; they just didn't get the right advice." Holliday said Paola's case is an example of the new administration's "hyper-enforcement environment." "We're in a hyper-enforcement environment right now, and all the laws are being enforced without any real consideration for the individuals involved," Holliday said. "DHS is taking some positions that... they've never taken before, especially on bond... DHS has now decided that everybody who comes across illegally can be considered an arriving alien. That has never been the definition, and it's quite a bad legal argument to make, but that's what they're making, nonetheless, and some immigration judges are buying it." Holliday said Paola no longer has a final order for removal, but she still has a long road of immigration court proceedings ahead to obtain a green card.  Once some jurisdictional matters are resolved, they will seek to obtain a status called "parole in place," which helps immediate family members of military service members have a more streamlined path to obtaining a green card. On June 9, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Servicespostedon social media about the case, writing that when Paola Clouatre "was apprehended by @CBP and ordered removed by a judge in 2018, she chose to defy the order and stay in the U.S. 7 years later, she had another bad idea and applied for a Green Card. @ICEgov took her into custody at our New Orleans office. @DHSgov has a long memory and no tolerance for defiance when it comes to making America safe again." New federal priorities to detain immigrants with pending deportation orders are taking higher precedence than the deference previously afforded to military families, immigration law experts say. According to federal memos, the Trump administration has madeany non-citizenswith pending deportation orders a priority for arrests. CBS News reached out to ICE for a comment for this story, but has not yet received a response. During his wife's months in detention, Adrian sent letters to elected officials pleading for their help — even two letters to President Trump. He says it was office staff of Louisiana Republican Sen. John Kennedy that stepped up and advocated for his wife's case. CBS News has reached out to Kennedy's office for comment, but has not received a response. "I'm ecstatic, I'm extremely grateful to my lawyer, to John Kennedy's office, and the community for all the support," Adrian said. Paola echoed those feelings of appreciation. "I feel happy, grateful," she said. "Thankful for the senator (staff) spending time with my husband. Thank you to the community." Black swimmers teach others amid history of aquatic segregation Arkansas officials reveal new details about Devil's Den murders of husband and wife Saturday Sessions: The Swell Season performs "Great Weight"

Wife of Marine veteran released from ICE detention after 2 months

Wife of Marine veteran released from ICE detention after 2 months BATON ROUGE, La. — Awife of a Marine Corps veteran and mother of twowas re...

 

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