Illegal fishing: Cartels expand criminal activity beyond drug, human smugglingNew Foto - Illegal fishing: Cartels expand criminal activity beyond drug, human smuggling

(The Center Square) – The modern cartels in Mexico supply the illicit drug market in America, but they've also shifted to new criminal schemes, diversifying into kidnapping, extortion, illegal mining, petroleum theft and illegal fishing. President Donald Trump moved to classify the six Mexican cartels as foreign terrorist organizations early in his term. Experts often call them transnational criminal organizations because their reach has expanded into other illegal markets. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and Treasury Department also are targeting cartels for moving black-market oil and gas across the Texas-Mexico border, The Center Squarereported. Cartels use other violent criminal activities to protect their drug operations and grow revenue, according to the DEAreport. They also engage in money laundering, extortion, petroleum theft, theft of other natural resources, weapons trafficking, human smuggling, prostitution, and illegal wildlife trade. The illicit profits from these peripheral activities make the cartels more resilient and increase their ability to expand, according to the DEA report. In November, the U.S. Treasury Department hit five members of the Gulf Cartel with sanctions over the group's illegal fishing in the Gulf of America, which includes illicit trade in red snapper and shark species. For this, they use small, fast-boat operations called "lanchas." The Gulf Cartel's illegal fishing operations are based out of Playa Bagdad, also known as Playa Costa Azul, a beach several miles south of the U.S. border. Cartels use the same fast boats to smuggle drugs and people, as well. "Treasury, as part of a whole-of-government approach to combatting transnational criminal organizations, remains committed to disrupting these networks and restricting these groups' ability to profit from these activities," Treasury officials said at the time. Illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing often involves forced labor and human rights abuses. Unregulated fishing practices further pose issues for ocean health and are one cause of global overfishing. They also contribute to the collapse or decline of fisheries that are critical to the economic growth, food systems, and ecosystems of countries worldwide, Treasury noted. Cartels began muscling in on illegal fishing years ago and have only grown bolder, said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior fellow in the Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy, and Technology in the Foreign Policy program at Brookings. The takeover started with criminal groups targeting fishers poaching protected species. Then they started extorting and regulating fishers harvesting low-value seafood. Cartels often only allowed fishers to sell solely to them. "Large companies fishing high-value species, particularly for export, were the last to be targeted, but are increasingly under pressure too," Felbab-Brown noted in a Brookingsreport. Cartels sometimes demand that communities sell them their fish harvests under threat of death. Other times, they tell the locals what species they want and set quotas for delivery. Cartels "violently punish non-compliance with those demands," Felbab-Brown noted. That's not the only difference. Cartels sometimes only pay in illegal drugs, such as methamphetamine. It's not just fishing; the cartels' reach extends to processing and sales. "Next, they establish halcones (spy) presence in communities and processing plants and demand that the processing plants process seafood brought in by the cartels and fake documents for it," Felbab-Brown noted. DEA officials are targeting a Mexican transnational criminal organization, recently designated as a foreign terrorist organization, involved in smuggling methamphetamine, heroin, and black-market oil and gas across the Texas-Mexico border. The investigation has identified multiple cartel leaders who have ties to multiple cartels in Mexico. Officials said the ongoing investigation found the criminal groups were stealing and smuggling crude oil from PEMEX, Mexico's state-owned petroleum company, into the United States. The groups then sell the stolen oil to U.S. oil and gas companies as part of a sophisticated trade-based money laundering scheme. This could be pushing up prices at the pump for U.S. drivers. "It is estimated that Mexico is losing tens of billions in tax revenue annually, while simultaneously costing the U.S. oil and gas companies billions of dollars annually due to a decline in petroleum imports and exports during this same period," the DEA report noted. "The focus will now shift to U.S. companies and members involved in facilitating this illicit Mexican petroleum smuggling operation."

Illegal fishing: Cartels expand criminal activity beyond drug, human smuggling

Illegal fishing: Cartels expand criminal activity beyond drug, human smuggling (The Center Square) – The modern cartels in Mexico supply the...
Social Security drops controversial anti-fraud review amid growing claims backlogNew Foto - Social Security drops controversial anti-fraud review amid growing claims backlog

A month after instituting a controversial anti-fraud policy that sparked widespread concern among senior citizens, the Social Security Administration has quietly dropped a key piece of the measure. The agency will no longer hold retirement benefit applications for three days to check for fraud, according to an email sent to workers and reviewed by CNN. The decision comes as the backlog in retirement benefit claims has swelled to nearly 575,000 applications, and employees, whose ranks have thinned from downsizing efforts, are being encouraged to work harder to process those claims. Pushed by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency, the anti-fraud policy was revised several times before being implemented amid an outcry from advocates for senior citizens and people with disabilities. Originally, the agency wanted to bar applicants fromfiling for benefitsover the telephone, arguing that it could not do sufficient identity verification. Instead, people would have had to confirm their identities through their online "my Social Security" account or visit a field office to complete the claim in person. Advocates feared that the policy would make it harder for many folks to file for claims, particularly if they are not computer-savvy or live far from the agency's offices. The policy change, along with a related one ending beneficiaries' ability to update theirdirect deposit informationover the phone, prompted senior citizens and people with disabilities to flood the agency's phone lines and field offices with concerns. Many thought they had to prove their identities to continue receiving payments or had questions about the new procedures. Less than two weeks later, Social Security announced that the anti-fraud policy would only apply to those filing for retirement, survivors or family benefits over the phone, and its rollout would be delayed by two weeks to April 14. The phone claims would be subject to a fraud review, and if irregularities were detected, applicants would have to go to a field office to prove their identity. Asked about the latest change in policy, a Social Security spokesperson said the agency "continues to refine the anti-fraud algorithm to flag only the claims with the highest probability of fraud. Continuous improvements will ensure timely processing of claims while protecting beneficiaries from fraud." However, the review process only found two cases – out of more than 110,000 claims – that had a high probability of being fraudulent, according to an internal document obtained byNextgov/FCW, which covers technology in federal agencies. Fewer than 1% of claims were flagged as potentially fraudulent. What's more, the anti-fraud checks delayed the processing of retirement claims by 25% and led to worse customer service, according to the May document. "It created a problem in customer service where one didn't exist, and it didn't do anything to prevent fraud," said Kathleen Romig, director of Social Security and disability policy at the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, who worked at the agency during the Biden administration. As of mid-May, Social Security had nearly 575,000 pending retirement claims, with about 140,000 of them languishing for at least 60 days, according to an email from Stephen Evangelista, Social Security's deputy commissioner for operations, that was sent to employees and viewed by CNN. He noted that the agency is receiving a record number of claims this year for several reasons, including the peak wave of Baby Boomers hitting retirement age and alaw passed by Congressthat beefed up Social Security benefits for nearly 3 million federal, state and local workers. The backlog began increasing swiftly last fall, shooting up from fewer than 350,000 pending claims in September to nearly 600,000 pending claims in April, according to Social Security data posted online. Evangelista urged workers in the field offices and another unit to "do their very best" to increase the number of retirement claims they clear every day by at least 10% for the rest of May. "I am calling for a sprint – a focused, concerted effort in all offices beginning today and lasting through the end of May – to address this growing backlog of pending retirement and survivor claims," he wrote. The missive did not go over well with many employees, said Joel Smith, president of the American Federation of Government Employees Local 3184, which represents workers in nearly 100 agency offices across the South and Southwest. Social Security is in the midst of culling about7,000 workers, or roughly 12%, from its staff – offering two rounds of deferred resignation offers, as well as other buyout and early retirement incentives. Multiple field offices have lost sizeable shares of their staff. And while the agency is reassigning about 1,000 employees from headquarters and regional offices to work in field offices and other mission-critical units, it will take time to train them. "Employees find it to be another sign of disrespect from an out-of-touch agency leadership," Smith said of the directive. Workers "weren't looking for another demotivational email from an agency leadership that cut their telework, encouraged them to quit and created an unnecessary backlog." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Social Security drops controversial anti-fraud review amid growing claims backlog

Social Security drops controversial anti-fraud review amid growing claims backlog A month after instituting a controversial anti-fraud polic...
Device that makes semi-automatic rifles fire quicker allowed by Trump administrationNew Foto - Device that makes semi-automatic rifles fire quicker allowed by Trump administration

President Donald Trump's administration agreed on Friday to permit the sale of a device that allows for semi-automatic rifles to be fired quicker, a decision that gun control activists say paves the way for more mass shootings. The Department of Justiceannouncedthe agreement as part of a settlement between the federal government and gun manufacturer Rare Breed Triggers, in litigation brought by the Biden administration. "This Department of Justice believes that the 2nd Amendment is not a second-class right," Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in the statement. "And we are glad to end a needless cycle of litigation with a settlement that will enhance public safety." Forced-reset triggers (FRT) allow a semi-automatic rifle to be fired at an increased rate by automatically resetting the trigger after each shot. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) classified them as illegal machine guns in 2022 under the National Firearms Act (NFA) of 1934. Machine guns have been heavily regulated by Congress since the NFA was passed, and the manufacture for civilian use was banned completely under the Firearms Owners Protection Act of 1986, a bill endorsed by the National Rifle Association. The Justice Department brought a lawsuit in New York in 2023 against Rare Breed Triggers, which made and distributed such devices, leading to a court ruling blocking it from selling them. While the case was pending, the National Association of Gun Rights (NAGR) filed a separate lawsuit in Texas challenging the ban and a judge there ruled the ban was unlawful. The latest settlement resolves those disputes and falls in line with Trump's February executive order on protecting the Second Amendment's "right to bear arms," the Justice Department said in its statement. "This decision marks a new era of holding the DOJ and ATF accountable when they trample the rights of law-abiding gun owners," NAGR President Dudley Brown said in arelease. "We made them give back what they took, and that's a precedent they'll never forget." The DOJ also said the settlement includes "agreed-upon conditions" concerning public safety with respect to FRTs, including that Rare Breed will not develop or design FRTs for use in any pistol and will enforce its patents. Rare Breed also agreed to promote the safe and responsible use of its products, the DOJ said. CNN has reached out to Rare Breed Triggers for comment on the settlement. Democratic lawmakers and gun control groups have widely condemned the decision. Vanessa Gonzalez, a Vice President with GIFFORDS, the national gun violence prevention group led by former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, said in astatementthe Trump administration "effectively legalized machine guns." "This is an incredibly dangerous move that will enable shooters to inflict horrific damage," Gonzalez said. "The only people who benefit from these being on the market are the people who will make money from selling them, everyone else will suffer the consequences." The national gun control advocacy group, Brady United,saidthe settlement means "highly dangerous weapons of war can now be purchased anonymously" and without a background check. "The Trump's Administration's secret settlement with the gun lobby to permit the sale of Forced Reset Triggers will turn already deadly firearms into weapons of mass destruction," President of Brady, Kris Brown, said in the statement. "(It) is not only an astonishing abuse of power, but undermines decades of sensible government gun safety policy and puts whole communities at immediate serious risk." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Device that makes semi-automatic rifles fire quicker allowed by Trump administration

Device that makes semi-automatic rifles fire quicker allowed by Trump administration President Donald Trump's administration agreed on F...
Whispers and long pauses: audio of special counsel interview shows Biden forgetting key datesNew Foto - Whispers and long pauses: audio of special counsel interview shows Biden forgetting key dates

In a 2023 recording former PresidentJoe Bidenat times speaks haltingly, having what appears to be repeated memory lapses as he speaks about his handling of classified documents as vice president. The recording of Biden's five plus hours of interviews withspecial counsel Robert Hurheld over two sessions were released byAxios on May 16.Hur ultimately decided not to prosecute Biden for improper possession of classified documents. He asserted that jurors would have viewed Biden as "a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory." The audio release comes amid similar reports from a new book that probes Biden's memory and lapses in office titled "Original Sin,"by Axios' Alex Thompson and CNN's Jake Tapper. It will be released Tuesday. The audio released by Axios doesn't provide unknown exchanges between Biden and Hur, but it does provide further insight into why Hur described Biden the way he did. At some times, Biden speaks almost at a whisper and has long pauses between words as he answers questions. He struggles to recall key dates, such as the year when his eldest son Beau Biden died. A ticking clock in the background emphasized the time Biden spent answering. At other times in the audio, Biden answers succinctly and clearly with no delays. He cracks jokes about his age and tells side stories. The Biden administration released a lightly redacted transcript of the interview while in office, but not the audio, asserting executive privilege. Several media outlets reported earlier this month that the Trump administration waspreparing releasing the full audio. Trump faced charges related to keeping hundreds of classified documents and refusing to turn them over to the FBI while Biden was under investigation for retaining classified documents. When pressed on whether he may have intentionally kept a classified document related to Afghanistan, Biden said, "I guess I wanted to hang onto it just for posterity's sake." The document was referenced in multiple books after Biden left office. Biden's attorney jumped in to clarify that Hur's team had asked a speculative question that did not reflect Biden's initial answer. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Special counsel audio shows Biden pausing, misremembering dates

Whispers and long pauses: audio of special counsel interview shows Biden forgetting key dates

Whispers and long pauses: audio of special counsel interview shows Biden forgetting key dates In a 2023 recording former PresidentJoe Bidena...
Report: SEIU spends big on politics, little on membersNew Foto - Report: SEIU spends big on politics, little on members

(The Center Square) – A labor policy analyst says the Service Employees International Union of Illinois spends far more on politics than it does on representing workers. Mailee Smith, senior director of labor policy and staff attorney at theIllinois Policy Institute, said the SEIU Illinois State Council reported to the Department of Labor that just 3% of its spending last year was on representing employees. "Sixty-five percent of its spending was on political activities and lobbying," Smith told The Center Square. The SEIU Illinois State Council spent over $1.8 million in 2024. Of that, just over $57,000 was spent on representing workers, $1.2 million went to political activities and lobbying and the rest went to administration, overhead and other priorities. Smith said the numbers highlight what is wrong with government unions in Illinois. "What they have become are political parties, whether it's SEIU or Chicago Teachers Union, they are using their clout to hire their own bosses. They pour money into candidates' campaigns. They get those candidates elected, and then that's who they sit across the bargaining table from," Smith said. The SEIU Illinois State Council is divided into local affiliates: SEIU Healthcare, SEIU Local 1 and SEIU Local 73. Smith said SEIU Healthcare and SEIU Locals 1 and 73 also spend money on politics. "While in some ways this does benefit the union or the members themselves, it does show that their focus is politics and not the basics of representing workers in contract negotiations," Smith said. "What this reporting shows is that the union's priorities are backwards. They're focusing on the politics while deprioritizing their members. That's probably why tens of thousands of workers have chosen not to be members of SEIU in Illinois." Smith said the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that government unions like SEIU are inherently political. A spokesman for SEIU did not respond to requests for comment.

Report: SEIU spends big on politics, little on members

Report: SEIU spends big on politics, little on members (The Center Square) – A labor policy analyst says the Service Employees International...

 

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