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☐ ☆ ✇ The Gateway Pundit

US Soccer Starts Off the World Cup with a Huge Win in Front of a Massive Pro-US Crowd in LA

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Vorschau ansehen US men's soccer team celebrates a victory, surrounded by teammates and coaches, showcasing joy and teamwork during a match.

US Soccer Starts Off the World Cup with a Huge Win in Front of a Massive Pro-US crowd in LA.

Before the game started, President Trump called to wish the US team well and let them know they could go all the way.

Last night, we received a message of support from POTUS ahead of our World Cup journey. pic.twitter.com/MVPITGldtS

— U.S. Soccer Men’s National Team (@USMNT) June 12, 2026

The National Anthem kicked off the event, with even Tom Cruise singing along.

Wonderful rendition of our National Anthem (with Tom Cruise singing along!). pic.twitter.com/woE2k4h1Mx

— Tom Fitton (@TomFitton) June 13, 2026

The US team’s first game was in LA in a gorgeous stadium in front of a massive crowd dressed in red, white, and blue.

What an unreal crowd tonight! Thanks for showing up and supporting the #USMNT! What an amazing start to the #FIFAWorldCup! pic.twitter.com/SwUfWtKEcv

— Cindy Cone (@cone_cindy) June 13, 2026

After the first goal, the US fans watching outside went crazy.

🚨🚨🚨🚨@Truly United Cam pic.twitter.com/Zf3Z6Ysn1Z

— U.S. Soccer Men’s National Team (@USMNT) June 13, 2026

The US went on to score four goals and beat Paraguay 4 – 1.

Four goals. Three points. pic.twitter.com/YKeYinIqMP

— U.S. Soccer Men’s National Team (@USMNT) June 13, 2026

The coach for the US team realized soccer in America is “massive, is big”.

Mauricio Pochettino was all smiles after the @USMNT‘s win pic.twitter.com/2rDLcycLSH

— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) June 13, 2026

Well done!

Last night, y’all. Wow. Just tremendous for the country and for US Soccer. 🇺🇸⚽💪 pic.twitter.com/7G4AvBYVQx

— Dan Isett 🌵 (@DanIsett) June 13, 2026

A huge win – starting off great.

A winning start for 🇺🇸#FIFAWorldCup

— FIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) June 13, 2026

Congratulations on the great win.

The post US Soccer Starts Off the World Cup with a Huge Win in Front of a Massive Pro-US Crowd in LA appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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IT’S TRUE! Steak’n Shake Is Offering 25 Cent Shakes Today After US Soccer Win Last Night!

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Vorschau ansehen Two delicious ice cream sundaes topped with whipped cream, colorful sprinkles, and chocolate figures, sitting in a car cup holder.

IT’S TRUE! Steak’n Shake Offering 25 Cent Shakes Today After US Soccer Win Last Night!

What a great company – support your local Steak’N Shake!

If America beats Paraguay in tonight’s World Cup match, come celebrate at Steak n Shake tomorrow with a Patriot milkshake for only 25 cents! Limited to one milkshake per customer.
🇺🇸 ⚽ 🏟 🇺🇸

— Steak ‘n Shake (@SteaknShake) June 12, 2026

This company is all in for RFK Jr. and MAHA!

On our MAHA journey, we have introduced the following:

100% grass-fed, grass-finished beef ✅

100% beef tallow fries ✅

100% beef tallow tots ✅

Grade A Wisconsin butter ✅

A2 whole milk ✅

Cane-sugar Coca-Cola ✅

Elimination of all microwaves ✅

And we are working on changing our buns!

We are committed to becoming seed-oil free, because we are committed to making fast food the best it can be.

On our MAHA journey, we have introduced the following:

100% grass-fed, grass-finished beef ✅

100% beef tallow fries ✅

100% beef tallow tots ✅

Grade A Wisconsin butter ✅

A2 whole milk ✅

Cane-sugar Coca-Cola ✅

Elimination of all microwaves ✅

And we are working on…

— Steak ‘n Shake (@SteaknShake) June 5, 2026

Here is RFK Jr. cooking the fries.

RFK Jr. is the best-dressed Steakburger cook in the world pic.twitter.com/hjIVH5RlZ9

— Steak ‘n Shake (@SteaknShake) May 2, 2026

Steak’n Shake is also all in on America!

Thank you Fort Wayne, Indiana, for allowing us to put up a 100-foot flag! pic.twitter.com/0xSVyehLaL

— Steak ‘n Shake (@SteaknShake) April 25, 2026

Support them today and every day!

The post IT’S TRUE! Steak’n Shake Is Offering 25 Cent Shakes Today After US Soccer Win Last Night! appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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The Persecution of Tina Peters – Part I

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Vorschau ansehen Professional woman smiling confidently with arms crossed, standing outdoors in front of a government building on a sunny day.

The Persecution of Tina Peters – Part I

Guest post by Tracy Osborne

After 606 days behind bars, Tina Peters is finally free!

Peters has become a chilling example of what should never happen in America: a public official punished not for abandoning her duties, but for fulfilling them. She uncovered vulnerabilities in our election system and illegal activity by the Secretary of State—and for that, she was investigated, prosecuted, publicly vilified, and ultimately locked away.

The real story of Tina Peters includes much more than the mainstream media was ever willing to tell—including a crooked DA, a possible kidnapping, and a tainted juror.

I first reached out to Peters in 2024 when she was housed in the Larimer County Correctional Facility in Fort Collins, Colorado. Since then, I’ve corresponded extensively with her through the jail and prison systems, spoken with her by phone, interviewed members of her inner circle, reviewed court records and sworn testimony, and met with her in person at La Vista Correctional Facility.

This account is based on those sources and aims to restore what the mainstream media has so often left out—Peters’ perspective.

To fully understand what she has gone through, you first have to understand her backstory.

A Not-So-Brief Recap

In 2019, when Peters was sworn in as Mesa County Clerk and Recorder, she became the chief election official in the county. Part of her oath required her to preserve federal election records for 22 months and state election records for 25 months. She took her oath seriously. She studied everything—the statutes she swore to uphold, the laws, the policies, the playbook of being clerk.

“During elections, we were instructed to save any paper or piece of trash found on the floor of a polling center and to put it in a box labeled ‘trash’ and keep it for 25 months. I did that,” she said. “I saved trash in a box for over two years because I took the law seriously.”

Then, in May 2021—just one month after a city council election and six months after the 2020 presidential election—Peters received an email from Secretary of State Jena Griswold. It informed her that a member of the SOS’s office, along with a representative from Dominion—the company that supplied Mesa County with their election equipment—would be coming in to perform something called a “Trusted Build” on the election management server (EMS). The EMS was the central computer system Mesa County relied on to run its elections while Peters was clerk.

Griswold described the Trusted Build as a routine upgrade that would remove a QR code from the system and reset it for future elections. She instructed Peters to perform something called an “Elections Project Backup” on the EMS beforehand, explaining that it would preserve all election records, so there was nothing to worry about.

Peters was dubious. She had recently been alerted by concerned citizens that something may have been amiss with the Grand Junction city council election just a month earlier. Four Democrats had been elected in a deeply red area, and rumors circulated that the winners knew the outcome before the votes were in.

A group called Stand with the Constitution canvassed the area and reported several irregularities, including: votes cast in the names of dead or incarcerated people, voters who said they had not voted despite ballots being cast in their names, and voters listing addresses that were not their own. The group presented Peters with multiple affidavits outlining their concerns, and soon she was inundated with angry phone calls from constituents demanding answers.

“I realized these people had a lot of questions, and I didn’t have the answers,” said Peters. “I needed to get them answers, so I was looking at everything, trying to figure out what exactly happened in this municipal election, and that’s when Griswold emailed me to say they were going to delete something off the EMS. My first thought was ‘no one should be deleting anything.’ I had taken two oaths to preserve election records for 22 and 25 months, and I knew the federal oath carried a criminal penalty if violated. The buck stopped with me, and now Griswold’s insisting they delete something from the EMS just six months after the presidential election and just one month after this municipal election that people are very upset about? Yeah, I was concerned.”

Peters decided she needed more information about what the Trusted Build and the Elections Project Backup would actually do.

She started asking questions. First, she called David Stahl, a Dominion employee. According to her court declaration, Stahl told Peters the Trusted Build would delete not only a QR code but also operating system log files, audit logs, and access logs. Peters asked whether the Elections Project Backup would preserve that information. Stahl said, “No.” The backup would save the results of the election, but not the underlying data showing how those results were tabulated.

According to Peters’ court declaration, she then called Griswold’s office and spoke with a member of Griswold’s staff who confirmed what Stahl had told her. As Peters understood it, the Trusted Build would make it impossible to audit either the 2020 presidential election or the recent municipal election.

“At this point,” Peters said, “I was between a rock and a hard place. By asking me to take part in the Trusted Build, Griswold was forcing me to violate my oath of office. I had taken an oath to preserve election records, and here was the Secretary of State asking me to delete them. I knew I couldn’t stop the Trusted Build from happening, so I needed a plan.”

Peters asked around and learned about something called a “forensic image.” A forensic image is a bit-by-bit, unalterable (read-only) copy of a server. In simpler terms, it’s a way to preserve the data exactly as it existed at a specific point in time. Peters thought if she could take a forensic image both before and after the Trusted Build, she would be able to preserve the records and see exactly what the Trusted Build would do.

Peters consulted the law and policy books and learned that taking a forensic image did not violate any rule, policy, or law, nor would it damage the server or interfere with the Trusted Build in any way.

In Peters’ mind, this was a win-win: she could uphold her oath by preserving records, and Griswold and Dominion could move forward with the Trusted Build.

Peters first reached out to the county’s IT department to see if they could take the forensic images. She said that, despite the media characterizing her actions as nefarious, none of this was a secret. In her email to the IT department, she said she cc’d both the county attorney and county administrators, and no one raised concerns or attempted to stop her.

Unfortunately, the IT department declined to do the job citing a lack of experience and know-how, so Peters turned to the private sector.

“It was 100 percent legal for me to engage a consultant to take these images. One-hundred percent legal,” she said. “Not only legal but necessary to uphold my oath.”

An acquaintance of Peters’s, Sherronna Bishop—who had earlier brought her affidavits from the canvassing effort—connected her with a man named Gerald Wood, whom she knew through the Stand with the Constitution group. According to Bishop, Wood said he worked in the “tech space” and could take the forensic images.

Bishop later sent a group text to Wood and Peters that read, “This is our guy.” Wood replied, “That I am.”

Peters then emailed a county employee who handled onboarding for new staff, and asked him to issue Wood a name badge and computer login.

Unfortunately, like the IT department before him, Wood eventually realized he didn’t have the experience or know-how to take the forensic image, so he told them they would have to find someone else.

Undaunted, Peters kept searching for someone who could do the job. Bishop then introduced her to a man named Dr. Doug Frank, a physicist and prominent ally of Mike Lindell, who had been traveling the country speaking at election-integrity events. Frank told Peters he knew the exact person for the job—a man named Conan Hayes.

Hayes was introduced to Peters as a white-hat cybersecurity expert who had worked with the government on numerous occasions. There was just one problem: Hayes told her he had recently assisted the government in taking down a child-trafficking page connected to a website called “Backpage” and believed he was being hunted by the cartels. Hayes said he could take the images, but only if he could keep a low profile.

Peters asked Wood if Hayes could use his name badge. Wood agreed. Woods’ consent was later verified by text messages, witness testimony, and in a post-trial hearing.

Peters said during elections, access to the secured area is strictly controlled, but the Trusted Build was presented as a benign computer upgrade that wasn’t taking place during an election. She said name badges labeled “Temp 1,” “Temp 2” and so on were often issued for vendors and others who were not county employees but needed access to the area. As long as those people were supervised by a county employee, it didn’t break any rule, policy or law.

The SOS office asked who from the Mesa County clerk’s office would be present at the Trusted Build. One of Peters’ employees RSVP’d that Wood, Peters, and another employee named Sandra Brown would attend the Trusted Build.

The day before the Trusted Build, Peters in order to conceal Hayes’ identity—at his own behest—turned off the cameras that monitored the EMS. While uncommon, this too, was not against any rule, policy, or law. Peters then escorted Hayes to the EMS, and he took the first image.

During this time, Wood was texting both Bishop and Peters for updates on their progress. On May 24, 2021—just one day before the Trusted Build—Bishop texted Wood, “Things are looking great!” Wood replied, “I was glad to help out. I do hope the effort proves fruitful.”

The next day, an employee from the SOS office showed up to perform the Trusted Build. Peters introduced Hayes to the SOS employee as “Wood”—again, not to conceal anything she was doing, but because Hayes insisted no one could know he was there. After the Trusted Build was complete, Hayes took a second forensic image.

After the Trusted Build was completed, Peters sent the forensic images to a Texas-based cybersecurity firm, Allied Security Operations Group, for analysis. The result was a series of lengthy forensic reports that became known as the Mesa Reports.

The Mesa Reports Revealed Three Inconvenient Truths:

  1. Griswold’s Trusted Build prematurely and illegally deleted approximately 29,000 digital records that should have been preserved under federal and state record-retention laws
  2. The Trusted Build created previously unseen databases that obscured or masked ballot-tabulation results.
  3. Dominion voting systems contained 36 wireless devices capable of connecting to the internet. Colorado law prohibits voting systems from being connected to the internet during an election.

It is beyond the scope of this already too-lengthy article to fully examine the Mesa Reports (See reports at tinapeters.us). But readers who decide to go down this rabbit hole, shouldn’t stop when they get to DA Dan Rubinstein’s “debunking” of the reports. Peters’ legal team later produced a detailed rebuttal to Rubinstein’s analysis, titled Official Response to Mesa DA Investigation. It’s worth a read.

Peters vs. The Deep State

Unfortunately for Peters, about a month before the first Mesa Report was released, a computer hacker named Ron Watkins—better known online as CodeMonkeyZ—published the forensic images and partial passwords online without Peters’ consent or knowledge.

Peters believes Hayes—the only other person with access to the images—gave them to Watkins, knowing Watkins would post them online. When Peters later attended Mike Lindell’s Cyber Symposium in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, she passed Hayes on the stairs. He would not look at her.

Within days of the leak, Secretary of State Jena Griswold announced an investigation into Peters, claiming she had tampered with election equipment. A day later, Attorney General Phil Weiser joined the investigation, as did DA Dan Rubinstein, who deputized two senior attorneys from Weiser’s office—Janet Drake and Robert Shapiro—to assist.

By mid-August, Biden’s DOJ was involved, including Merrick Garland’s FBI. Other federal agencies that assisted included the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, known as CISA.

This was a one-of-a-kind, all-hands-on-deck investigation. Rubinstein later said the “core” joint investigation with the Colorado AG was complete while asking that a parallel federal investigation continue.

In my review, I could not find another case in which DA Dan Rubinstein leveraged this same mix of local, state, and federal actors to prosecute anyone—let alone a nonviolent, elderly, first-time offender.

One day after launching the investigation, Griswold barred Peters from overseeing Mesa County elections and named Sheila Reiner to take her place. Reiner had served as Mesa County clerk before Peters and later as Mesa County treasurer. The Mesa County commissioners wanted former Secretary of State Wayne Williams to take over Peters’ role. After some political and legal jostling, Williams and Reiner agreed to share the post.

Here’s an interesting footnote journalists Erin Clements and Barb Hulet uncovered via the Colorado Open Records Act (CORA): According to their reporting, at the time Williams was helping fill Peters’ post, he was also serving as a senior advisor for Runbeck, the vendor that provides Mesa County with mail-in ballots. Similarly, Reiner had been employed by Dominion in 2020, just months before taking over Peters’ post, while simultaneously serving as county treasurer.

Williams did not respond to a request for comment. But Reiner defended her work for Dominion, calling it “routine temp work.”

As if replacing Peters with elected officials who were quietly taking second paychecks from election vendors isn’t bad enough, there’s more. Remember how the Mesa Reports revealed that the EMS was equipped with 36 wireless devices capable of connecting to the internet?

Guess who ordered those?

According to a December 2015 press release, Wayne Williams was Secretary of State when Colorado selected Dominion as its election-system vendor. Williams’ office ordered the machines with Wi-Fi capabilities. But according to the machine’s manual — published by both the SOS office and Dominion—he did not have to. Ordering the machines with Wi-Fi capabilities was optional.

Later, in a heated meeting with the county commissioners and Wayne Williams, Bishop asked Williams point-blank why he ordered the machines with Wi-Fi capability. Williams did not respond.

Here’s the main takeaway: when Griswold pushed Peters out, she did not replace her with neutral outsiders. She replaced her with politicians on the Runbeck and Dominion payrolls, one of whom was responsible for ordering the EMS with Wi-Fi capabilities in the first place.

To Tell the Truth

While officials were moving to contain Peters, Peters was trying to alert the authorities. Just three weeks after the leak, Peters received the first Mesa Report. She immediately sent it—along with this sober letter—to the Board of County Commissioners.

Griswold was never investigated by Colorado authorities for prematurely and illegally destroying 29,000 digital election records.

Instead, the board of county commissioners responded to Peters’ letter by saying they were cooperating with the investigation initiated by Griswold which alleged Peters tampered with election equipment.

Bad Press

The Deep State wasn’t the only machine coming at Peters. While federal and state officials pursued her in court, the media tried her in public.

Arguably, no one has written more about Tina Peters than Charles Ashby, a longtime reporter for the Grand Junction Sentinel. A search of the Sentinel’s archives—dating back to the day Griswold first launched the investigation—turns up nearly 1,100 articles on Peters, the vast majority of them written by Ashby, most of them negative in tone.

Ashby frequently framed Peters as a “conspiracy theorist” and often described her concerns about election irregularities as “false” or “debunked.” Those labels do powerful work on the reader. Before Peters’ arguments are fully heard, the reader has already been told how to understand them: as fringe, false, or unserious. In that way, calling someone a “conspiracy theorist” becomes a rhetorical censorship tool. It is a wink and nod to the reader: no need to weigh the evidence for yourself. No need to investigate. We’ve already done the critical thinking for you, and the verdict’s in: Peters is crazy—pay no attention to her.

When you consider the sheer volume of content Ashby produced on Peters, the scale is staggering. If the average news article runs between 600 and 800 words, and Ashby wrote roughly 1,000 articles mentioning Peters, even a middle-of-the-road estimate of 700 words per article puts his coverage at about 700,000 words. That is more than three copies of Moby-Dick.

Ashby’s reporting did not remain confined to Grand Junction. His articles and framing were picked up, cited, republished, or echoed by media outlets across Colorado and the nation, many of which relied on local reporting to shape the broader narrative of the case. In July 2022, Emma Brown, a reporter for The Washington Post, cited one of Ashby’s stories and praised it as “more great reporting from Charles Ashby at the Daily Sentinel,” a small but telling example of how Ashby’s coverage became part of the national conversation.

What is even more astonishing is that, for all the time, effort, and energy Ashby devoted to covering Peters, his stories do not appear to include a single fresh quote from her. Nor do they seem to contain the familiar line readers have come to expect at the end of contested stories: “Tina Peters did not respond to a request for comment.” According to the people who help manage Peters’ social media, there is a simple explanation for that: in all the years Ashby covered her, he never once reached out to ask for her side of the story—on any of it.

Imagine writing enough articles to fill three copies of Moby-Dick and never once asking the woman at the center of it all for her take.

The negative media saturation was so pervasive that it raises an obvious question: was this simply aggressive local reporting, or was there a broader network helping shape and amplify the narrative? One document points directly to that question.

Journalist Erin Clements discovered that between mid-August and the end of September—at the time Wayne Williams and Sheila Reiner were manning Peters’ post and overseeing elections—Williams billed Mesa County $31,283 for about six weeks of work. One of his line items included “Dinner with Lynn Bartels to enlist assistance in media matters.”

Bartels was not some random media contact. She was a longtime Denver Post political reporter who later became Wayne Williams’ spokeswoman during his tenure as Colorado Secretary of State. Then, in 2020, Bartels became a communications consultant. One of her clients was the Colorado Clerks Association, led by Matt Crane.

According to Clements’ reporting, Crane had his own connection to Dominion. His wife, Lisa, worked for Dominion for nearly a decade and was a close colleague of the infamous Dominion Vice President Eric Coomer.

That makes Bartels’ work for the clerks association relevant to the Peters story. She was not simply doing generic communications work; she was helping promote the public image of an organization led by someone with direct ties to the very election vendor at the center of so many public concerns. And she did it, at least in part, by placing clerk-friendly articles in newspapers across Colorado—articles that blurred the line between journalism and public relations.

Cory Hutchins, a reporter for The Colorado Independent, called out Bartels for placing articles in a dozen papers that carried the tone and authority of journalism but functioned more like positive PR for Crane’s office and the county clerks. What looked to readers like independent reporting was, in reality, little more than promotional material for the clerks dressed up as news. Another journalist, Jason Salzman, questioned on his blog whether Bartels’ work amounted to “state-sponsored” journalism.

Despite these few criticisms, Bartels is a darling in Colorado’s media and political circles. Her Facebook page reads like a who’s who of that world. The same names and faces appear again and again across her posts: Wayne Williams, Sheila Reiner, Matt Crane, John Hickenlooper, Phil Weiser, Charles Ashby—even Jena Griswold makes a couple of appearances!

These photos show people with deep personal and long-lasting friendships—people who have celebrated milestones together, shared private jokes, and traveled in the same circle for years. They look genuinely chummy—arms draped around one another, laughing easily, sometimes with beers in hand. In one post, Bartels makes fun of Williams for wearing purple jeans. In another Reiner appears to “photo bomb” a snapshot of Griswold and Williams.

Bartels appears especially close with Charles Ashby, whom she calls her “sessions husband.” In one post, she warns Ashby that she accidentally left the window open in the guest room he’ll be occupying later and worries it might be flooded with hail. In another, he can be seen helping fix her bathroom sink.

To be clear, there is nothing inherently wrong with any of these relationships. Grand Junction, Mesa County, and Colorado politics are relatively small worlds. Journalists, elected officials, county clerks, political operatives, and government employees inevitably cross paths, develop friendships, and often remain in one another’s social and professional circles for years.

But those relationships do provide important context. When many of the individuals involved in shaping the public narrative around Peters were connected through longstanding personal and professional ties, it raises fair questions about how that narrative was formed, who influenced it, and whether Peters was ever given a meaningful opportunity to tell her side of the story.

More pointedly: Did Wayne Williams use taxpayer money to enlist Lynn Bartels to orchestrate a smear campaign against Peters? And was Charles Ashby the tool she used to complete the job?

Lawfare Unleashed—Indicted on a Lie

While the media narrative hardened in public, prosecutors were building the criminal case behind the scenes.

A quick recap: Turning off the cameras was not against the law. Allowing Hayes access to the machines was not against the law. Taking the forensic images was not against the law. Even CodeMonkeyZ leaking the pictures online (including partial passwords) was not against the law. Having the images analyzed by a cybersecurity firm was not against the law.

An impartial District Attorney would have concluded that no crime took place. But DA Rubenstein was determined to pursue charges against Peters.

His challenge was how to get there.

Since the truth wouldn’t lead to a crime, Rubenstein needed more.

During the investigation, Wood’s home was raided by the FBI, no doubt a harrowing experience that would rattle anyone. While still shaken from the raid, agreed to testify before a grand jury and at trial that Peters stole his name badge—and without his consent or knowledge—gave it to Hayes to use.

A Quick Sidenote: Wood isn’t just a guy who works in the “tech space.” He’s also a pastor. You have to wonder whether Peters would ever have been indicted without Wood’s testimony.

Wood’s testimony eventually led to Peters being found guilty on four felonies. The first—Attempting to Commit Criminal Impersonation—was based on Wood’s claim—that Peters stole his badge.

The other three were for Attempting to Influence a Public Servant. One charge was for RSVPing to the SOS’s office that Wood would attend the Trusted Build. One was for sending an email to an IT employee asking him to onboard Wood with a name badge and computer login. And one for introducing Hayes as “Wood” to the SOS employee who performed the Trusted Build.

None of these charges followed a simple direct line from obvious crime to Peters. For example, Peters wasn’t even the person who sent the RSVP email to the SOS office, nor was she even cc’d on that email.

At the time she requested Wood be onboarded, Peters was fully intending to use him to take the forensic images. It was only later, when Wood admitted he couldn’t do the job, that Peters realized she needed to find someone else.

When Peters shut off the cameras and introduced Hayes as “Wood” to the SOS employee who performed the Trusted Build, she did so at Hayes’ request—because he wanted to keep a low profile—not because she was trying to conceal her own actions.

Because Rubenstein didn’t have a clear crime that led directly to Peters, he reverse-engineered his prosecution. In other words, he started with the pound of flesh he wanted—Peters—and built the charges to fit. This is the definition of lawfare, a clear perversion of the law—and Rubenstein knew it.

According to Clements’ reporting, Rubinstein “was having some trouble reconciling the prosecution of Tina Peters with prosecutors’ rules of professional conduct and had to call in the cavalry to help him brainstorm ways to avoid being ‘accused of wrongdoing.’”

The email Clements uncovered was sent by Rubinstein to United States Attorney for Colorado Matthew Kirsch and several district attorneys across Colorado. Its subject line was “Rule 3.8 Meeting,” an apparent reference to the rule of professional conduct governing prosecutors.

Credit: Erin Clements, Barb Hulett, Joe Hoft

Rubenstein writes: “I am happy to report that it is because one of Tina Peters co-defendent’s flipped on her, and we will be taking a proffer statement.”

Wood appears to give Rubenstein the leap of lawfare he needed. Without it, he would have been left with the truth, and that’s a much weaker case. Rubenstein could have still argued that state employees were misled, but he couldn’t base the whole thing on a case of stolen identity nor use that stolen-identity theory as the foundation for the remaining felonies.

Clements offers this analysis in her article:

“First, Rubinstein appears to recognize that there is no precedent for the prosecution he wants to undertake, as he expresses a desire that this group of legal minds start writing opinions and issuing guidance documents in the vein of the Colorado Bar Association (CBA) and the Colorado District Attorneys’ Council (CDAC). Without a coherent legal pathway for prosecution, it appears Rubinstein encouraged this course of action to give prosecutors cover.”

“Second, Rubinstein notes that it is problematic that they have no formal appointments from a government body to lay the groundwork to prosecute Peters.”

“Third, Rubinstein informs the group of their need to anticipate defending themselves as to why they didn’t seek an opinion on Peter’s case from the Colorado Bar Association Ethics Commission.”

Clements concludes:

“Rubinstein and his cronies appear to have succeeded in giving their efforts the veneer of legitimacy because three months after this email was sent, Peters was indicted by a grand jury.

Part II coming next

The post The Persecution of Tina Peters – Part I appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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THE TRILLION-DOLLAR SNOW JOB: How the Cannabis Industry and Lawmakers are Hiding an Existential Health and Aging Crisis

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Vorschau ansehen A close-up of a hand holding a burning cigarette with smoke rising against a blurred background.

THE TRILLION-DOLLAR SNOW JOB: How the Cannabis Industry and Lawmakers are Hiding an Existential Health and Aging Crisis

Guest post by Stuart Reece 

I have worked with drug-affected people for fifty years.  In the last 30 years, I have conducted 300,000 – 400,000 consultations in addiction medicine.  I have over 160 peer-reviewed scientific papers, including more than 80 on cannabis, and two papers in Nature family journals. Our 2,500-page book on the epidemiology and epigenetics of cannabis was recently published by Elsevier Press.  I am a Professor of Medicine at two Australian universities. 

Because of new results from Harvard research and NIH affiliate data, I lie awake at night worrying about the USA.  In a universe saturated by cannabis insanity, we have all heard the industry spin. Is it possible to bring the power of Science to bear on the unholy trinity of addiction, namely deception (lies), seduction (the high, the cash), and manipulation (the cash), all shrouded in fear (and death)???

Cannabis Use Curves

US National 2024-2025 cannabis industry data shows the industry surging strongly forward, driven by an army of 440,000 employees pumping almost 6 million pounds of cannabis from 128 million square feet of canopy into 40,000 dispensaries for a wholesale value of $6Billion and a retail value of $31Billion (note the 500% markup); yielding a mere $5Billion tax revenue. This industry publicly boasts that it is the fastest-growing industry in history. Or as Charlie Kirk famously quipped “Everything smells like weed now.”

The National Survey of Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) is an annual nationally representative survey of the non-institutionalized US population. Three key indices of cannabis use are monitored longitudinally, which are last year’s use, last month’s use, and cannabis use on most days.  The most days index is key and is widely regarded as a direct measure of cannabis addiction in the general community.  All three indices are rising exponentially.

The index for habitual use doubled from 2007 through 2017, and then doubled again to 2023 — representing a terrifying shortening of doubling times from ten years down to five.  Importantly, all three curves show upticks about 2007 and 2017, presumably due to either changes in policy and / or perception. Importantly the most recent data is for 2024 which shows last year cannabis use of 22.2%, last month cannabis use of 15.4% and most days cannabis use of 7.5% nationally.  This indicates that two-thirds of all cannabis users actually use at least monthly, and half of all monthly users are actually habitual users.  Such data proves and documents the addictive nature of modern cannabis on the national stage.

Using the same kind of exponential modelling we used to accurately predict the current rate of US autism 14 years in advance it is possible to show that the exponential growth curves for last year, last month and almost daily cannabis use will cross the 50% market penetration level nationally in 2049, 2052 and 2054 at current rates of growth; except that due to the curve inflection rates growth rates are already supra-exponential and currently proposed re-scheduling will further accelerate these levels so that these arithmetically calculated estimates are already too little and too late.

Once the 50% line of market penetration is crossed, rescuing America from inundation by the cannabis tsunami will become exceedingly difficult in a democratic society…  Meaning the window for intervention is fast slamming shut.

Aging

Just as a computer has both hardware and software, cells have both hardware, which is the genes on DNA, and software, which is the machinery that controls which genes get used and when.  Scientists call this complex machinery the “epigenome,” meaning upon or after the genes. This is why some cells are heart cells, and some cells are brain cells, etc., because different genes are used.  It is also why cells that were once young become old.

In a series of brilliant pathfinding studies the Harvard Medical School aging laboratory and many other leading groups have shown that the biological age of cells can be made older by inducing just a handful of breaks in the gene hardware or re-arranging the epigenetic software.

On the contrary, cells and mice can be made biologically younger and the aging process actually reversed by cellular reprogramming using stem cell factors and new chemicals. In mice, such techniques can reverse optic nerve crush injuries, cataracts, glaucoma, muscle wasting, hair greying, and osteoporosis, showing that these techniques can change major and important age-related health outcomes.  These elegant and highly sophisticated studies demonstrate that genetic and epigenetic damage directly regulates the aging process and formally proves this pathway.

And just like the genes, epigenetic changes can be long-lasting and can be inherited for three to four generations.

Importantly, the epigenome is highly sensitive to environmental stimuli such as diet, obesity, exercise, and drug use, including cannabis use.  Virtually all epigenetic studies of cannabis use document epigenetic changes.  Cannabis has been well known to cause chromosomal breaks since at least 1967.  Cannabis was shown to advance cellular age by at least 30% in humans at age 30 years, a level of increase which likely rises with age.  Cannabis has been linked with many disorders of older age including falls, heart attack, stroke, hypertension and accidents. 

Cannabis is known to damage the mitochondria and cellular energy flows, which are age-defining conditions and directly cause disruption of both the genetic hardware and the epigenomic software.  Cannabis has been shown to accelerate hardening of the arteries, induce immune changes and hormonal disruptions which are also age defining changes.

These changes have been found in both eggs and human sperm and inheritance of cannabis induced epigenetic changes has been documented by multiple workers to subsequent mouse generations.  Structural and epigenetic changes demonstrate that cannabis exposed eggs and sperm are chromosomally and epigenetically prematurely aged; which means of course that the fertilized eggs (zygotes) are aged from (prior to) conception.

In general genotoxic drugs are known to cause birth defects, mental health disorders including mental retardation in offspring, cancers including transgenerationally inheritable cancers and aging.  Cannabis is implicated in all five of these domains of pathology which further confirms its genotoxic nature.  These and other areas will be addressed in subsequent pieces.

It should be underscored that the industry formally does not recommend the use of cannabis in pregnancy as they acknowledge its genotoxic activities.  FDA warnings about the use of cannabis products in those likely to become pregnant also confirm this at Government level…  None of which stops many Coloradan budtenders in numerous dispensaries recommending cannabis to pregnant women. 

Genotoxicity is so serious that most drugs which display this action are dropped immediately.  Most drugs have to prove stringent safety and efficacy tests before marketing is permitted.  With cannabis however the usual safeguard process has been reversed with marketing preceding efficacy studies so that now a drug with widely acknowledged genotoxic effects is undergoing trials to try to find a valid indication to justify its use and dissemination.

All cannabinoids are known to be genotoxic as the toxic portion resides in the inner nucleus of its chemical structure known as olivetol which is common to all cannabinoids.

The painful lessons learned with thalidomide – when US was narrowly saved from the fate of many other western nations – are about to be re-learned with cannabis.  Thalidomide is after all the reasons these the modern genotoxic safety tests – which all cannabinoids are known to fail – were implemented worldwide in the 1950’s.

Economic Impact

Applied to the whole adult age range from 18 to 85+ years a figure of 50% age acceleration is a fair estimate of the acceleration of the aging process cannabis is likely to induce.  The USA spends around 5Trillion of its 31Trillion GDP annually on health care.  AI estimates suggest that this would approximately double if the population became 50% biologically older to up to 11Trillion annually.

People older than 55 years constitute 30% of the USA population, but contribute 60% of the health care costs.  If that section of the population older than 60 grew 60% older biologically, which is what the data points towards, then their health costs are projected to rise three- to four-fold, consuming an extra $5-8Trillion per year.  Further detailed refinements of these models are being prepared.

To these already intimidating budgetary items should be added numerous other costs not included in aging per se, relating to:

  • ·       mental health,
  • ·       childhood autism,
  • ·       crime,
  • ·       violence,
  • ·       mass shootings,
  • ·       birth defects,
  • ·       homelessness and unemployment,
  • ·       cancer treatments and deaths,
  • ·       the costs of follow-on secondary (cocaine, opioid, amphetamine) addictions, including their associated deaths, and
  • ·       childhood misery, including fetal deaths
  • ·       contamination of the water table 
  • ·       environmental contamination
  • ·       wildlife death and deformity
  • ·       food chain contamination for the general population
  • ·       for the next three to four generations.

These concerns are discussed elsewhere.

Call to Action

It goes without saying that compared to these intimidating numbers the derived tax revenues are insultingly negligible/invisible/trivial/ridiculous. 

Why are lawmakers ignoring the known Science just to chase tax dollars? We call on the public and independent media to break through the “media snow job” and demand a real public debate.  Let Science have its voice!!

The post THE TRILLION-DOLLAR SNOW JOB: How the Cannabis Industry and Lawmakers are Hiding an Existential Health and Aging Crisis appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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How Much Discretion Do States Have Under Federal Election Law?

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Vorschau ansehen Illustration of a balance scale comparing state maps on one side and the U.S. Capitol building on the other, symbolizing state versus federal government issues.

How Much Discretion Do States Have Under Federal Election Law?

Guest post by Linda Brickman

When election tools, voter data, State procedures, and Federal guardrails collide.

In the United States, election laws can look very different from one state to another. One State may allow same-day voter registration. Another may require earlier registration deadlines. One State may rely heavily on mail ballots. Another may impose stricter identification requirements. Some States participate in interstate data-sharing systems such as ERIC. Others have withdrawn or chosen different methods of maintaining voter rolls.

This article follows an earlier discussion of voter rolls and voter list maintenance. That article raised a larger question: if Federal law governs voter registration and election administration, why do State election procedures still differ so dramatically?

And that raises a simple but equally important question:

How much discretion do States actually have under Federal election law?

The answer begins with the U.S. Constitution. States have broad authority to administer elections, including the time, place, and manner of holding elections. That is why election procedures can vary so widely across the country. Arizona does not administer elections exactly like California. Texas does not operate exactly like Florida. Each state has its own laws, procedures, deadlines, databases, and election officials.

But State Authority is Not Unlimited.

Federal law creates guardrails. Congress has enacted laws such as the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, commonly known as the NVRA or Motor Voter Act, and the Help America Vote Act of 2002, known as HAVA. These laws do not make every state election system identical, but they do establish certain national standards for voter registration, voter list maintenance, statewide voter registration databases, and protections for eligible voters.

And that is where the debate begins.

Where does lawful discretion end, and where does legal conflict begin?

If Federal law sets the floor, how high may States build their own election systems above it?

  • When does state discretion become innovation?
  • And when does it create legal conflict?
  • Or when does it undermine public confidence?

These questions matter because State election procedures directly affect voter rolls, ballot access, election security, transparency, and public trust. A State may claim it is expanding access. Critics may argue that the same policy weakens safeguards. A State may claim it is improving list maintenance. But critics may argue that the method raises privacy, accuracy, or political concerns.

ERIC is One Example.

The Electronic Registration Information Center was created as a data-sharing tool to help States identify voters who may have moved, died, or registered in more than one jurisdiction. Supporters describe ERIC as a useful method for improving voter-roll accuracy. Critics argue that ERIC raises serious concerns about governance, data sharing, outside influence, privacy, and its requirement that member states conduct outreach to eligible but unregistered individuals.

The ERIC debate is not only about one organization. It is part of a larger question: who should control the tools and data used in election administration?

Should States rely on interstate data-sharing organizations? Should voter-roll maintenance be handled entirely within State government? What level of transparency should be required when voter data is shared? What safeguards should exist before any outside system influences how election officials identify registration records for review?

Those questions are Not Theoretical…

In recent years, some States have remained in ERIC, while others have withdrawn and pursued alternative list-maintenance methods. That alone demonstrates how much discretion States still exercise within the Federal framework.

But discretion cuts both ways…

State flexibility allows States to respond to local needs, population changes, technology, voter behavior, and administrative challenges. At the same time, too much variation can leave citizens wondering why election procedures differ so dramatically depending on where they live.

And that is where Public Confidence enters the conversation.

Voters are often told that election laws are being followed. But many citizens do not know which laws apply, who enforces them, or where the line exists between State authority and Federal oversight. When that line becomes unclear, distrust grows.

The issue is not whether states have discretion. They do.

The issue is whether that discretion is being exercised transparently, lawfully, and in a manner that protects both election integrity and the rights of eligible voters.

States should not be treated as mere administrative branches of the Federal government. The Constitution gives them a central role in election administration. But neither should States be permitted to use discretion as a shield against accountability.

That is why citizens should be asking better questions:

  • What does state law allow?
  • Who is responsible for enforcement?
  • What procedures are written in statute, and what procedures are created by administrative rule or election manual?
  • When outside organizations, private vendors, or interstate data-sharing systems are involved, what transparency exists?
  • And when a State’s election procedures appear to stretch beyond the public’s understanding of the law, who has the authority — and the courage — to challenge them?

Election integrity does not depend only on counting ballots. It depends on whether citizens can understand and trust the rules used before the first ballot is ever cast.

The real question is not whether States have discretion under Federal election law.

THEY DO!

The real question is: Where does lawful discretion end, and where does legal conflict begin?

Final Key Takeaways

✓ States have broad authority to administer elections, but that authority is not unlimited.

✓ Federal law creates guardrails through the Constitution, NVRA, HAVA, and other election-related statutes.

✓ Because States write and administer many of their own election procedures, election rules can vary dramatically from State to State.

✓ ERIC is one example of how an election administration tool can become a national debate over data, privacy, transparency, outside influence, and public trust.

✓ The question is not whether States have discretion. They do!

✓ The real question is where lawful discretion ends, and legal conflict begins.

✓ Citizens should not wait until Election Day to understand the rules. The laws, procedures, budgets, and legislative decisions made before an election often shape the election long before the first ballot is cast.

Endnotes

  1. S. Constitution, Article I, Section 4, Elections Clause.
  2. OJ NVRA List-maintenance guidance.
  3. HAVA statewide voter-registration database requirement, 52 U.S.C. § 21083.
  4. DOJ overview of the NVRA / Motor Voter Act.

© 2026 Linda Brickman. All rights Reserved.

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Obama-Pal Norm Eisen Is Trying to Shut Down UFC Event at White House

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Vorschau ansehen UFC event held in an iconic arena with a large crowd, featuring a vibrant lighting setup and large screens displaying fighters near the White House.

GOOD LUCK: Weenie-Armed Obama-Pal Norm Eisen Trying to Shut Down UFC Event at White House.

Weak weenie-armed Norm Eisen, Obama‘s pal and former Ethics Czar, wants to shut down the UFC event planned at the White House this weekend.  It’s clear that even Norm doesn’t have the muscle for this one.

Norm Eisen has been messing with any efforts by any conservatives to end the massive corruption created by the Obama regime over the past few decades. The destruction of America by unethical and unlawful Eisen, Barack Obama, and his many goons who tried to take over this country and destroy the Republic is beyond belief.

Norm Eisen brags about his seedy tactics and lawfare, and about how he’s stalled many of President Trump’s efforts in the courtroom. He wrote white papers about Trump’s made-up crimes.   He even attended President Trump‘s trial in New York. This was the one that was made up from accounting entries and calling them crimes.

Norm Eisen is one of the most unethical people to ever step into the White House,  other than maybe Obama, George Soros, or Hillary, etc.

If we had a DOJ, Norm Eisen would be dealt with immediately for his treasonous acts.

Now, Eisen is trying to stop the UFC event at the White House.

The great event is going to occur this weekend, and it’s doubtful that Eisen will be anywhere near there. And thank God.

The libs can’t stand this event at the White House.

Psaki on the UFC arena at the White House: “Nothing says Rome is burning like building a big, heinous coliseum to overshadow the seat of America’s democratic government.” https://t.co/lCNExQmii6 pic.twitter.com/4URkRr4a21

— The Briefing with Jen Psaki (@PsakiBriefing) June 11, 2026

The problem for the libs is that the event and its cleanup are paid for by private funds, and Americans LOVE IT.

Weenie Norm is fighting to shut something down that most Americans think is really cool…poor Norm.

The Daily Mail shared on the lawsuit from Norm’s corrupt entity.

The filing Saturday by the Public Integrity Project on behalf of two Virginia residents contends the Trump administration’s authorization of the June 14 event was unlawful. The lawsuit says such approval violated National Park Service regulations prohibiting sporting events on federal parklands, Congress did not consent to the towering arch overlooking the event space and no environmental review was conducted before the construction.

“This is fundamentally a private, commercial, corrupt use of our most sacred national monuments for private gain,” said Brendan Ballou, a lawyer for the plaintiffs. “And that is what is motivating this lawsuit.”

It’s difficult to believe that two residents in Virginia have standing in this one, but Eisen never cares.  It’s the lawfare that counts, and Obama and Biden judges are used to back his claims.

However, Eisen never considered one other important fact besides America being excited about the event – those fighters are mean.

Eisen doesn’t have a chance against these guys.

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AbleChild Suggests Historic Coroner Reform Law After Butler Assassination Attempt, Patel–Fitton Clash

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Vorschau ansehen Illustration depicting evidence and documents related to presidential death investigations, highlighting the importance of transparency and accountability in American history.

AbleChild Suggests Historic Coroner Reform Law After Butler Assassination Attempt, Patel–Fitton Clash

Republished with permission from AbleChild.

The recent dispute between FBI Director Kash Patel and Tom Fitton of Judicial Watch about the information provided in the embarrassingly overly redacted FOIA related documents reminds AbleChild of many of the incompetent agencies that had its hands in the investigation of the attempted assassination of President Donald J. Trump in Butler, PA in July of 2024, beginning with the Coroner of Butler County, William F. Young III.

AbleChild has been following the “investigation” of the attempted assassination in the hope of obtaining information about the mental health of the shooter involved. Unfortunately, the problems with the physical evidence in this case make it difficult to reliably report whether the alleged shooter had been taking any prescription drugs at the time of the shooting and as reported in several earlier articles, it is impossible to provide any written documentation about how the shooter’s body was identified and that responsibility lies squarely with the Butler County coroner.

William F. Young III, the Butler County coroner at the time of the shooting, is statutorily required to follow specific procedures in death investigations. For example, 16 P.S.C.A. 13915 “The coroner shall safely keep in the coroner’s charge: (1) the personal effects and property to have been on or about the person at the time of death…”

The first problem lies with coroner Young not viewing the alleged shooter’s body lying on the roof of the AGR building until 6:15a.m. the following day, despite having been at the rally grounds at midnight after the shooting. Why? Moreover, based on his own report, Young was literally the last person to see the deceased body on the AGR building roof after numerous law enforcement agencies, emergency response personnel and anybody else who got access to the roof, had violated the crime scene, with one law enforcement agent literally zip tying the hands of the dead body.

Under Pennsylvania law, the coroner has the duty under 16 P.S.C.A. 13918 to: “having a view of the body shall investigate the facts and circumstances concerning a death that appears to have happened within the county…” Further, statutorily, Young was responsible for determining “the identity of the deceased and notify the next of kin of the deceased.”

Under 16 P.S.CA. 13922 “Prohibition of Moving a body.” Coroner Young “has the jurisdiction to investigate the facts and circumstances of death, the body and the surroundings of the body shall be left untouched until either: (1) the coroner has conducted an initial investigation of the scene of death, including viewing and photographing the scene in the manner that most fully discloses how the individual died (2) the coroner directs or authorizes the touching of a body and the surroundings of a body, except as provided by law or as circumstances may require.”

By that time Young arrived at the AGR building, it is fair to say, the crime scene had been completely violated and the body handled by an unknown number of people. The question becomes: did coroner Young provide authorization for all those unknown people to handle the body? And, more importantly, what was taken from the body and crime scene by those unknown people?

In Young’s Case Summary Report the coroner writes, “the subject’s hands were zip tied behind his back by emergency personnel and pronounced deceased at 18:25 on 07/13/24 by ESU Medic Michel Vasilodiolis-Nicol…” That’s it. What about the death scene? The gun? The detonator? What was the alleged shooter wearing? Zip, Zero, Nada.

So Young ships the body of the alleged shooter, who laid on the roof all night being handled by untold number of people, to the Allegheny County Medical Examiner (ME) for autopsy. What does the ME receive from Coroner Young? You can’t make this up. According to the Body Receiving Record, the ME got clothing consisting of “shirt, belt, shoes, socks, underwear, shorts and one zip tie.”

More bizarre, the Allegheny ME writes in his official autopsy report of the alleged shooter that “the body is accompanied by a clear plastic bag containing medium length brown hair (submitted as evidence).

First, who cut the hair from the alleged shooter’s head and put it into “a clear plastic bag” along with the body? Coroner Young makes no mention of this bagged hair anywhere. And, if the ME has the body of the alleged shooter and reports in the description of the body “The head hair is brown, straight, and medium to long in length (approximately 6 to 9 inches in length)” why would the ME have need of a bag of hair of the same body? Whose hair is in the bag? Was it tested and for what?

Then to really make this screwy, the Allegheny ME provides in his Release Receipt that he returned to the Beinhaufer Funeral Home the body of the alleged shooter and one zip tie. Why weren’t the clothing and bag of hair part of the return to the funeral home? Where are the clothes and bag of hair today?

And, finally, who got the Home Depot receipt that was reported to have been pulled from the alleged shooter’s pocket while laying on the roof of the AGR building. Remember the FBI says the shooter purchased a ladder from the Home Depot early on the morning of the shooting. Where is that receipt for a ladder that was never used and later found fifty miles from the rally? Why wasn’t the receipt collected by Coroner Young? Did Young even ask what was removed from the body? For that matter, where’s the ladder?

AbleChild could go on and on about the major physical evidence problems in this case and has in previous articles.  AbleChild can’t help but wonder if this is why the FBI refuses to release its unredacted investigation. But more than that, the obvious actions, and lack thereof, by the Butler County Coroner, William Young III, need to be investigated.

And AbleChild would go one step further and suggest that legislation needs to be adopted in Pennsylvania, and later all fifty states, that make coroners responsible for willful/neglectful failure to carry out statutory mandates.

The attached suggested legislation should be considered immediately by the Pennsylvania Legislature to ensure death scene reports are properly carried out and state law is performed by medically qualified employees. The point of the coroner’s job is to ensure that the initial case report will hold up in a court of law in assisting in determining identity of the deceased, and exact cause and legal manner of death. They are the legal voice of the deceased.

Remember Allegheny County ME Ariel Goldschmidt testified before Congress that he had no part in any actions prior to the body being transported to his office in Pittsburgh, leaving any investigation of the body on the AGR roof to then Coroner Young.

AbleChild argues that William Young’s death investigation is so flawed it’s useless and, while Young is no longer Butler County coroner, he has some explaining to do and the State needs to enact laws that hold its coroners personally responsible for blatant incompetence.

AbleChild is a 501(3) C nonprofit organization that has recently co-written landmark legislation in Tennessee, setting a national precedent for transparency and accountability in the intersection of mental health, pharmaceutical practices, and public safety.

What you can do.  Sign the Petition calling for federal hearings!

Donate! Every dollar you give is a powerful statement, a resounding declaration that the struggles of these families will no longer be ignored. Your generosity today will echo through generations, ensuring that the rights and well-being of children are fiercely guarded. Don’t let another family navigate this journey alone. Donate now and join us in creating a world where every child’s mind is nurtured, respected, and given the opportunity to thrive.  As a 501(c)3 organization, your donation to AbleChild is not only an investment in the well-being of vulnerable children but also a tax-deductible contribution to a cause that transcends individual lives.

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Caitlin Clark Fans Go Off on Fever Management After Clark is Named in TIME’s 100 Most Influential People in Sports

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Vorschau ansehen Caitlin Clark, honored in TIME 100 Sports 2026, poses with a basketball, showcasing her achievements in women's basketball.

Caitlin Clark Fans Go Off on Fever Management After Clark is Named in TIME’s 100 Most Influential People in Sports

In her last game, Clark made a last-second shot from way out to win the game.

And just so people know , Kelsey Mitchell was the primary option on this play & Caitlin Clark was the secondary option. Sophie made the decision to give it to cc as the inbound defender took away the Kelsey pass. That’s y the pass was late
pic.twitter.com/1J9lL4V6C0

— X coach anderson X (@coachandere6xa) June 9, 2026

Even the Washington team’s broadcasters were impressed.

🤣🤣🤣 https://t.co/8S0LZ9CT6z pic.twitter.com/CHEgK0PPjd

— ¯⁠\⁠(⁠◉⁠‿⁠◉⁠)⁠/⁠¯ (@koyeahk) June 10, 2026


However, the response from Clark’s coach after the shot was unimpressed at best. She looked mad. Many believe the play was drawn up for other players.

Watch Caitlin’s facial expression change as she low fives Stephanie White after that game winner. Goes from smiling to no facial expression & no eye contact with SW, back to smiling. pic.twitter.com/0kBPjQboSj

— John Michaels (@johnm5454) June 9, 2026

Basketball great Mychal Thompson says that despite Clark’s greatness, the Fever team doesn’t want her. The all-time scoring leader in college history for men’s or women’s basketball is not wanted in Indianapolis. The team makes millions off of Clark but the team envies her and wants to change her.

Mychal Thompson on the Fever/Caitlin Clark situation:

“I have watched every game of Caitlin since she was a sophomore at Iowa, probably the biggest fan of hers outside of her family. It just looks like they don’t want the Caitlin Clark that we fell in love with, at Iowa” pic.twitter.com/F2rrKF8yAZ

— Ashwin (@Sudharsan_ak) June 10, 2026

Fans can see it and are calling for Clark’s trade to a team that will let her play and be great. The Fever don’t like her greatness.

This is why fans went off on the Fever’s back office when COO Amer Cox called Clark the “needle” in women’s basketball after Caitlin Clark was named to @TIME’s 100 most influential people in sports 2026 list.

To paraphrase @chiney… She didn’t move the needle. She IS the needle!

Congrats to CC! https://t.co/UKxfiDDYFS

— Amber Cox (@AmberLCox) June 9, 2026

Here are the fan’s reactions on social media.

You Had 2 Weeks To Speak Up For Her When The Entire Media YOU Have Personal Ties With Was Burying Her 6 FT Deep

But Of Course She’s The “Needle” When Convenient

Saddest Part Is I Used To Root For Ya’ll Heavy Never Again

— VENOM 😈 (@BlameVenom) June 9, 2026

And…

The way you stayed silent while your franchise player was being dragged was a shame. She has spent years defending this organization, shielding it from criticism, and taking the hits for everyone else.
You did not deserve that loyalty. I hope she finds a franchise that values and…

— Data (@DataScientistOC) June 9, 2026

And…

Where were u when the trade rumors started or the media going at cc? Y r u letting this coach turn this into the most boring team in the league ? U don’t deserve cc

— X coach anderson X (@coachandere6xa) June 9, 2026

Clark fans want Clark out of Indy and in an organization with a good coach and back office.

Must have hurt you to type that out 😂

It’s ok you’ll live.

In Caitlin’s shadow 😏

You WNBA ladies are such high school mean girls YOU FORGOT those of us that stood up to you grew up too. CC can take the high road.

You’re laying with dogs now good luck surviving the fleas. pic.twitter.com/kcCxBKX27n

— The Business Cowgirl 🤠 (@thebizcowgirl) June 9, 2026

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Louisiana Energy – Part 4: End the Legacy Lawsuit Litigation Lottery, Deliver Real Stewardship

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Vorschau ansehen Aerial view of coastal erosion and legal documents, highlighting the impact of legacy lawsuits on environmental stewardship and land management.

Part 4: Legacy Lawsuits – End the Litigation Lottery, Deliver Real Stewardship

Guest post by Danielle Walker, The State of Freedom and Brad LeBlanc, Geoscientist and President of Bradford Minerals Corp.

See Part I, Part II, and Part 3.

In Part 3 we called out Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) demands for what they are: a non-kinetic Softwar campaign—Jason Lowery’s framework for power projection by other means—designed to constrain American energy production, inflate capital costs, and shift control upward. One of the key action items was this: build on recent legacy-lawsuit reforms with a final, principled resolution.

To be clear on the statutes: Act 312 (2006) is Louisiana’s legacy oilfield remediation law. It gave courts heavy control over cleanup standards and opened the door to damages well beyond actual restoration costs. Act 458 of 2025 (SB 244) is the major reform. Effective for cases filed after September 1, 2027, it shifts cleanup-plan approval to the Louisiana Department of Energy and Natural Resources (LDENR), raises the evidentiary bar, and begins to rein in the worst abuses.

Governor Jeff Landry and Attorney General Liz Murrill have advanced Act 458, a clear step in the right direction. Yet they continue to support key coastal lawsuits alleging oil and gas companies “destroyed the Louisiana coastline.” The substantial geologic evidence strongly indicates otherwise: the real driver of land loss is natural subsidence driven by downward movement along surface-reaching faults. This fault-generated subsidence exposed the marsh to greater wave action and accelerated erosion. Dredging for drill sites was never the primary cause.

For decades, the widely accepted narrative in Louisiana has been that coastal land loss was primarily caused by oil and gas canals and dredging. The belief was that these canals allowed saltwater intrusion, which then eroded the marsh and turned it into open water. That story drove hundreds of legacy lawsuits and shaped public policy for years.

Chris McLindon, President of the New Orleans Geological Society, has summarized a multi-university effort that put industry-supplied seismic data under rigorous review. Teams from UNO, Tulane, and the University of Texas at Austin analyzed more than 500 square miles of transition-zone seismic data to produce the Atlas of Surface Fault Traces in South Louisiana, presented at the Louisiana Coastal Geology Symposium. The patterns are unmistakable: land loss tracks active, surface-reaching faults with precision. Dredging canals for oil-field exploration and development was never the primary driver. Seasonal deltaic sedimentation continues to deposit fresh material that is distributed laterally, rebuilt, eroded, and rebuilt again—recharging the delta system even as it drives compaction and localized fault movement. Subsidence is a natural geologic process.

Hurricanes dramatically accelerate this process. Once fault-driven subsidence lowers the marsh platform below critical elevation, major storms cause rapid and catastrophic land loss. This raises the critical question of causation: Did poor management of marshes and barrier islands, along with canal dredging, cause greater subsidence that hurricanes then worsened—or were those features already doomed by underlying faults? The seismic data shows that the active growth faults came first. They created the fundamental vulnerability. Both industry decisions to cease routine maintenance and government policies that turned every canal into a potential liability made localized problems worse, but the geologic foundation set the stage. Hurricanes did not create the subsidence problem—they exposed and intensified it.

The time has come to move forward pragmatically and urgently: stop the litigation lottery, fund verifiable restoration through an industry-led trust, and preserve the wetlands, marshes, and estuaries we still can. This evidence aligns with the broader perspective of Western Washington University Professor Emeritus Don Easterbrook.

His decades of research on recurring climate cycles—detailed in works such as Evidence-Based Climate Science—show that Earth’s temperatures have fluctuated naturally for millennia, long before industrial CO₂ levels rose. Ice-core records reveal temperatures rising 600–800 years before atmospheric CO₂ followed after the last Ice Age—clear proof that CO₂ is largely a follower, not the driver, of climate change. Sea-level rise itself has been modest and steady at roughly seven inches per century, a natural geologic process. In the New Orleans area, the natural rate of subsidence is two to three times that of natural sea-level rise. The real crisis in coastal Louisiana is not this modest global rise, but the much faster relative sea-level rise caused by natural subsidence and the loss of new sediment supply—the very processes the fault atlas documents.

Critically, Louisiana’s actual flood-protection and coastal-restoration work is increasingly grounded in this same science. The Greater New Orleans Urban Water Plan, $14 billion in post-Katrina flood infrastructure, and the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority’s (CPRA) Master Plan all draw heavily on university-industry collaborations. In Plaquemines Parish, 28 different faults were mapped—most reaching the surface—with several corresponding to “abrupt shifts from emergent wetlands to fully submerged areas of open water.” CPRA’s own presentations feature the Ironton fault trace near the proposed Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion. These projects are being designed around verifiable fault and subsidence data, not around the claims driving the lawsuits.

The recent termination of the Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion in July 2025 further validates this shift. Ballooning costs, suspended federal permits, and stakeholder litigation led CPRA under Governor Landry to cancel the politically charged mega-project and redirect funds to smaller, targeted alternatives. The decision aligns with the geologic reality McLindon documented: the Ironton fault crosses the site, and fault-driven subsidence would have undermined long-term land-building claims regardless of sediment volume. As McLindon warned in his 2019 Advocate op-ed, “Suing energy industry won’t help preserve N.O.,” the city’s lawsuit “tears at the fabric of this cooperative relationship” and could not have come at a worse moment for the science driving the 2023 Master Plan. Commercial fishermen, oystermen, and shrimpers stood united against the diversion, correctly seeing it as an immediate threat to their working waterfront.

Governor John Bel Edwards chose confrontation instead of cooperation. In a 2016 Advocate interview he warned coastal parish presidents: sue the oil companies, or I will. This created such a toxic business climate that capital fled Louisiana for more predictable states like Texas. More than 300 legacy suits targeted the oil and gas sector. Instead, endless litigation delivered the opposite: lawyer fees, fleeing investment capital, loss of jobs and businesses in the service sector, and the problem of coastal land loss remained unresolved.

Act 458 of 2025 is a step forward. But partial reform is not victory, and the trial lawyers have been suing the industry with abandon for twenty years now. Last week’s announced agreement in principle with ExxonMobil to resolve coastal disputes and partner on orphaned wells shows that pragmatic resolutions are possible—though, as is customary in these cases, full terms remain under court seal.

The principled resolution is straightforward and long overdue:

  • Enact a comprehensive, time-limited remediation framework with reasonable time limits on when old claims can be brought—closing the door on legacy lawsuits sooner than the September 2027 cutoff in Act 458.
  • Strengthen an industry-funded coastal cleanup trust dedicated exclusively to verifiable wetlands and environmental impacts—measured by science, not speculation, and managed by scientists and proven financial managers, not politicians.
  • Deliver full liability certainty to operators who meet transparent, science-based standards—while ensuring that any legitimate, verifiable environmental impacts are still fully addressed and accountability remains in place.

This is not about letting anyone off the hook. It is about replacing the litigation lottery—which has generated far more billable hours than acres of restored marsh—with measurable, on-the-ground stewardship that actually protects the coast. Raising public awareness to the atlas of surface-reaching faults provides a roadmap to more appropriately address the issue; Easterbrook’s geologic cycles put the broader CO₂ narrative in its proper historical context; the trust provides the funding mechanism; and genuine liability certainty provides the capital trigger.

If Louisiana offers the oil and gas industry the regulatory certainty and production-focused incentives it needs, capital and jobs will come roaring back—while delivering real, science-based stewardship for the coast and its people. This is an all-ships-rise approach: no zero-sum tradeoffs detrimental to the coast, working families, taxpayers, or the industry itself (trial lawyers pursuing the legacy lottery excepted—they’ve had their day).

  • True permitting reform, not crony speed. Replace the current duplicative, unpredictable process with fixed timelines at the Louisiana Department of Energy and Natural Resources (LDENR): 90 days for routine permits, 180 days for complex ones. One-stop shop using existing seismic and fault-atlas data so operators are not buried in redundant reviews. This slashes capital costs without sacrificing environmental safeguards.
  • Production-focused tax treatment that rewards output, not carbon burial. Targeted severance-tax relief or production credits for new wells, recompletions, and workovers in legacy fields. Contributions to the industry-funded coastal cleanup trust become fully deductible or creditable. Raw hydrocarbon production pays the bills; 45Q credits do not.
  • Accelerated orphaned-well plugging with liability certainty. Fold a practical orphaned-well solution into the legacy framework: industry trust dollars plus operator matching funds (and potentially other targeted federal mechanisms) plug wells faster, with full liability shields for good-faith participants. This directly benefits fishermen by reducing potential leaks while clearing the decks for new investment.
  • Direct benefits for coastal parishes and working families. New production revenue is shared with coastal parishes for local infrastructure, fisheries habitat projects, and workforce training. Fishermen and communities get tangible wins—targeted, fault-aware sediment work and canal backfilling where science shows it will stick—funded by the very industry that developed the coast in the first place.
  • Genuine engagement with local communities. Listen to their concerns up front rather than blindsiding them with projects hidden behind NDAs and government-driven secrecy. The top-down approach being used to force CCS on coastal parishes cannot and will not be repeated when it comes to refineries, exploration, and genuine energy expansion.

One additional note on the broader picture: Large-scale CCS injection carries documented geomechanical risks, particularly near active faults. High-pressure CO₂ can reduce effective stress on pre-existing faults, raising the chances of reactivation and accelerated localized subsidence—the very process already driving coastal land loss. Major producers should therefore drop support for unconstitutional CCS projects in Louisiana and double down on traditional expansion here, where the geology is known and the infrastructure exists.

Brad LeBlanc Frames the Economic Choice

Supporting real oil and gas is GDP+. You bring a valuable commodity that did not previously exist at the surface up from the ground, sell it for profit, and pay taxes on the product. The state and its people win again and again. Supporting CCS is GDP-. Taxpayer-funded subsidies stick CO₂ in the ground; there is no marketable product, no continual jobs, no recurring revenue stream—only permanent liability transferred to Louisiana and its citizenry after a few short years, and after 50 years permanent responsibility for any disasters that occur from CO₂ injection. Favoring tax incentives for a GDP- process while the state’s own energy heartland bleeds investment is backwards economics.

Europe, begging for American LNG while its own net-zero fantasies leave it exposed to every Hormuz shock and every adversarial Russian supply disruption, has zero standing to demand ESG compliance. Louisiana has even less reason to keep punishing the industry that built its once-great economy and its coast in the first place. On the contrary, we have every incentive to ensure they can be happy and highly productive here.

Danielle Walker Shares A Personal Perspective

I grew up, live, and fish in one of the areas of greatest noted subsidence in South Louisiana. I see it with my own eyes, and the devastation to the once-great inland fishing waters, bays, and estuaries is undeniable. This is not about forgetting the people, the livelihoods, or the homes of those who live and work on our beloved coast. It is simply about addressing the real root cause as we do everything possible to protect and restore what we can—and pray about the problems we cannot fix with human means alone. I don’t pretend to have all the answers here, but the fault atlas is public and deserves far more attention. The geologic evidence is public. The economic choice is public. We should work from reality—not political talking points or feel-good policies that simply waste time and money.

End the litigation lottery. Finish the Act 312 reforms. Deliver stewardship that works. Give producers the regulatory certainty and production-focused incentives they need to invest here—not in carbon credits or foreign markets. That is how Louisiana turns the Softwar campaign on its head and reclaims energy dominance on our own terms.

(The series continues with Part 5: Softwar on American Soil.)

 

The post Louisiana Energy – Part 4: End the Legacy Lawsuit Litigation Lottery, Deliver Real Stewardship appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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Join Steve Sterns Today at Noon for His America 250 – Celebrating 250 Years of Freedom, Faith, and the American Spirit

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Vorschau ansehen Promotional image for America250 event featuring Steve Stern, celebrating 250 years of freedom, faith, and the American spirit on June 10 at 12 PM EST.

Join Steve Sterns today at noon for his America 250 – Celebrating 250 Years of Freedom, Faith, and the American Spirit

As our nation marks 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence, we will come together to reflect on America’s past, celebrate its present, and look toward its future. This special event will feature patriotic leaders, influential voices, elected officials, media personalities, and grassroots activists from across the country sharing what America means to them and why this milestone is so important.

Hosted by Steve Stern, this one-of-a-kind broadcast will feature appearances by:

Steve Bannon, Mike Lindell, John Solomon, Patrick Byrne, Dr. Gina Loudon, Todd Callender, Dory Wiley, Wayne Root, Grant Stinchfield, Joe the Box, Jerome Corsi, Peter Ticktin, Joe Hoft, Dan Smeriglio, Linda Szynkowicz, Linda Lanier, Clay Clark, Cleta Mitchell, Cowboy Logic, Jierra Clark, Andy Meehan, Mike Carey, Joel Breazeale, Steve Gillan, Jonathan Broadbent, Dan Schultz, Adam Connely, Liam Kevins, and many more distinguished guests.

Together, we’ll celebrate the values that have made America exceptional for 250 years—freedom, faith, opportunity, patriotism, and the enduring American spirit.

📅 Wednesday, June 10
⏰ 12:00 PM EST
📺 Streaming Live on Rumble via @SternAmerican

Don’t miss this historic event as we celebrate 250 years of the greatest experiment in self-government the world has ever known.

America 250: Honoring Our Past. Celebrating Our Present. Inspiring Our Future.

The post Join Steve Sterns Today at Noon for His America 250 – Celebrating 250 Years of Freedom, Faith, and the American Spirit appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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Caitlin Clark Makes a Last-Minute “Logo Three” to Seal Win for Her Team

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Vorschau ansehen Player number 22 from the Denver team prepares to shoot during a close basketball game with a crowd cheering in the background.
Player number 22 from the Denver team prepares to shoot during a close basketball game with a crowd cheering in the background.
Caitlin Clark buries a three to win game over Atlanta in closing seconds. (screen grab)

Caitlin Clark Makes a Last-Minute “Logo Three” to Seal Win for Her Team

Caitlin Clark made a huge shot last night, winning the game for her indiana team in the final seconds of the game.

This is impressive when taking into consideration the attacks Clark has taken from the WNBA, her team’s management, coaching staff, and jealous women in the league.

CAITLIN CLARK FROM 30 IN THE CLUTCH OMGGGGG

CAITLIN CLARK FROM 30 IN THE CLUTCH OMGGGGG pic.twitter.com/7xVnmcoonC

— Shabazz 💫 (@ShowCaseShabazz) June 9, 2026

Here’s another look.

Caitlin Clark game-winner as seen on phantom 👻🎻🎼 pic.twitter.com/EBXEpHL7pE

— Indiana Fever (@IndianaFever) June 9, 2026

There were indications that coach Stephanie White, as in the past, had a different play called in which Clark wasn’t the shooter. Good thing Sophie Cunningham and Caitlin Clark improvised.

🚨 Postgame Film Session 🚨

Stephanie White: “Did y’all follow the game plan?” 🤨

CC & Sophie:
👀
👉👈
…define ‘follow…’😳😂😂 @CaitlinClark22 @sophaller @IndianaFever pic.twitter.com/Ef181DiKSi

— Evelyn DR (@prettygirle2004) June 9, 2026

It is surprising Clark got the ball after all the bonehead moves the Fever organization has made with Caitlin Clark.  Lakers legend Mychal Thompson explains how the Fever have been misusing Caitlin Clark.

Lakers legend Mychal Thompson explains how the Fever have been misusing Caitlin Clark. pic.twitter.com/ZPWmFgSnQt

— Jason Whitlock (@jasonwhitlock) June 8, 2026

The improvisation works well with Caitlin Clark. She’ll have to do more of this if she wants to win and before the WNBA and her team destroy her.

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