Inside the blast zone following bombing at Calif. fertility clinicNew Foto - Inside the blast zone following bombing at Calif. fertility clinic

Three days after an explosion believed to beintended for a fertility clinicrocked the city of Palm Springs, California, the smell of smoke still filled the air. Portions of the blast zone around the American Reproductive Centers are fenced off but Palm Springs Police Chief Andy Mills allowed CBS News to get a look at the damage. Chief Mills — who was among the first to respond to the scene on North Indian Canyon Drive that Saturday morning — said the suspected bomber backed his Ford Fusion into a parking spot and that now has a crater created by thepowerful explosion. Part of the vehicle's engine still sits in the middle of that lot on the east side of the IVF clinic, which houses its offices, and shrapnels are buried in the stucco walls of surrounding buildings. The suspect, 25-year-oldGuy Bartkuswas killed in the explosion, the FBI confirmed following DNA testing, and four other people were injured in the explosion. None of the victims is believed to be staff members of the clinic, city officials said. Investigators say the blast pattern shows that the device was far more damaging than a low-grade explosive such as fireworks. The bomb used was identified as a large, "vehicle-borne improvised explosive device," according to two sources familiar with the investigation. Its blast could be felt more than a mile away from the blast zone, the FBI said. With a massive blast radius, there were more than 150 members of law enforcement at the height of the investigation sifting for evidence, Chief Mills said. FBI teams used drones, 3D scanners and bomb-sniffing dogs to map out fragments and trace the chemicals that may have been used for the car bomb. Thanks to tips from the public and surveillance videos, authorities told CBS News they are piecing together what happened between the suspect's arrival in Palm Springs at 6 a.m. local time Saturday and the time the bomb went off at 11 a.m. Bartkus was a resident of Twentynine Palms, home to a large Marine Corps base about an hour's drive from Palm Springs, the FBI said. He stated in writings or recordings that he was against bringing people into the world against their will, according to law enforcement sources familiar with the investigation. Detectives believe Bartkus acted alone at the site but said they're scouring his online chats to learn whether anyone helped him buy parts or refine the design of the bomb. "I'm going to stand firm on ... if you see it and you didn't say something, then you're as morally responsible for what took place as the person who pulled the trigger," Mills said. The IVF clinic is still too unstable for employees to enter, authorities said. Once all the evidence is collected, the building may have to be demolished. Watch: DHS Secretary Kristi Noem asked what habeas corpus is in Senate hearing Rubio interrupted at Senate hearing during remarks on changes at State Department Car bomb outside Palm Springs fertility clinic was act of terrorism, officials say

Inside the blast zone following bombing at Calif. fertility clinic

Inside the blast zone following bombing at Calif. fertility clinic Three days after an explosion believed to beintended for a fertility clin...
Justice Department opens investigation into former New York Gov. Andrew CuomoNew Foto - Justice Department opens investigation into former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo

The Justice Department has opened an investigation into Andrew Cuomo, former New York governor and a top candidate for New York City mayor, following a referral from congressional Republicans who accused Cuomo of lying during an investigation of his administration's Covid-19 response, a person briefed on the matter said. The nascent inquiry follows an earlier request to the Biden administration that didn't result in an investigation. It also comes after Justice officials ended a separate corruption prosecution of Eric Adams, the current New York mayor who is one of Cuomo's rivals for the job. That move prompted upheaval in the Manhattan US Attorney's Office after prosecutors refused to drop the case as ordered. Adams has vowed to assist the Trump administration's immigration efforts. The Justice Department declined to comment on the Cuomo investigation, reported earlier byThe New York Times. Rich Azzopardi, a spokesperson for the former governor, said that they had not been informed of the federal investigation and defended Cuomo's testimony to Congress. "We have never been informed of any such matter, so why would someone leak it now? The answer is obvious: This is lawfare and election interference plain and simple—something President Trump and his top Department of Justice officials say they are against," Azzopardi said in a statement. "Governor Cuomo testified truthfully to the best of his recollection about events from four years earlier, and he offered to address any follow-up questions from the Subcommittee — but from the beginning this was all transparently political." A Justice official defended the timing of the moves on Adams and Cuomo, saying "This Department of Justice has ended the weaponization of government and will continue to follow the facts in every case in order restore one tier of justice for all America." This is a developing story and will be updated. CNN's Mark Morales contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Justice Department opens investigation into former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo

Justice Department opens investigation into former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo The Justice Department has opened an investigation into Andrew...
James Comey is back in Trump's crosshairs. This time, it's different.New Foto - James Comey is back in Trump's crosshairs. This time, it's different.

James Comey, the polarizing former FBI director, walked into a Barnes & Noble in New York City, sat down on a three-legged stool and began to extol the virtues of his new crime novel to the few dozen people who came to his book signing Monday night. Days earlier, he sparked a firestorm on the right — and a Secret Service investigation — when heposted a photo on Instagramthat Donald Trump and senior administration officials insist was a call for the assassination of the president. Now Comey, as talkative and confident as ever, was brushing aside the chance that he might face criminal charges. "They were total pros," Comey said of the Secret Service agents who interviewed him, adding of the brouhaha: "Maybe it'll go away." But while he was signing books, Trump's former defense lawyer Alina Habba, now the acting U.S. attorney in New Jersey, announced thatshe has filed criminal chargesagainst Rep. Lamonica McIver, D-N.J., for her actions during a protest outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility in Newark. The announcement underscored how differently the Justice Department has operated in the first four months of Trump's second term compared with the first four months of his first term. Trump loyalists — like Habba, Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel — hold top law enforcement roles, and this administration has been even more aggressive in targetingpolitical foes, as well asuniversitiesandlaw firms. While Comey downplayed the investigation of his Instagram post as a "distraction," the indictment of McIver put into stark relief how he may not be as safe from prosecution — or at least a long-running criminal probe — as he indicated Monday. Trump "is surrounded by people willing to cater to his worst instincts," said Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University and the B. Kenneth Simon Chair in constitutional studies at the libertarian Cato Institute. "I was no fan of Jeff Sessions or Bill Barr, but it seemed to me that they had some limits," Somin added, referring to Trump's first-term attorneys general. "It seems like Pam Bondi has a lot fewer limits." Hours before he showed up at the Barnes & Noble, Comey appeared on MSNBC for his first interview since the Instagram post last Thursday. It showed seashells arranged in the shape of "8647" on the beach. Trump is the 47th president, and 86 can informally mean "to get rid of," according to Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Comey said he never considered that the post would generate controversy. "I really thought that I was done," he said. "I was in another life. I was a grandfather and an author wearing sweaters and jeans and then went for a walk on the beach and posted a silly picture of shells that I thought was a clever way to express a political viewpoint. "And actually, I still think it is. I don't see it the way some people are still saying it," Comey added. "But again, I don't want any part of any violence. I've never been associated with violence, and so that's why I took it down." Trump fired Comey in 2017 amid the FBI's investigation into whether the 2016 Trump campaign coordinated with Russia. He was investigated by John Durham, a special counsel appointed during the first Trump administration to investigate the propriety of the FBI's Trump-Russia probe, and he was not charged with a crime. "It's not my first rodeo," Comey said. But he did express dismay at the Trump administration's targeting of political opponents. "One of the real problems we have in this country right now is the use of the president's power aiming at individuals who don't have my background or experience," he said. "My thing, to me and I hope to everyone else, is just a distraction that goes away in a weekend. But there's something much more important going on here — the use of power to aim at individuals, eroding the rule of law." Last month, Justice Department and FBI officials opened a federal criminal investigation of New York Attorney General Letitia James, who won a$454 million civil fraud judgmentagainst Trump last year, alleging she made false statements on a mortgage application. The Department of Homeland Security said this month that a former federal official who denied Trump's claims of 2020 election fraud, Chris Krebs, is the subject of anunspecified federal law enforcement investigation. And the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia has opened an investigation into Andrew Cuomo, the former New York governor who is now running to be the mayor of New York City, a person familiar with the matter told NBC News late Tuesday. TheNew York Timeswas first to report on the probe, which it said focuses on Cuomo's congressional testimony about the pandemic. All deny any wrongdoing. McIver, the New Jersey congresswoman, was charged with two counts of "assaulting, resisting, and impeding" two federal immigration agents at a protest outside a migrant detention facility in Newark on May 9. She faces a maximum penalty of eight years in prison if she is convicted, but sentences are usually well below the maximum. "It's political intimidation, and I'm looking forward to my day in court," McIver told reporters Tuesday in Washington. Federal investigations can drag on for years, damaging people's reputations and depleting their finances. "They can hurt you by investigating you for three years," said a former federal prosecutor, who spoke on condition of anonymity, citing fear of retaliation. "The question is do you want to hurt people or convict people?" the former prosecutor added. "The first thing is easy. The second thing is hard. You need evidence." Pressed about the Secret Service investigation in his television interview, Comey said the judiciary is the only branch of government left that will protect him from a dubious prosecution. "I believe in our judiciary," Comey said. "I believe in that one remaining leg of our three-legged stool — that independent judiciary — is alive and well, and that gives me great comfort."

James Comey is back in Trump's crosshairs. This time, it's different.

James Comey is back in Trump's crosshairs. This time, it's different. James Comey, the polarizing former FBI director, walked into a...
China warns of legal consequences to those involved in US chip measuresNew Foto - China warns of legal consequences to those involved in US chip measures

BEIJING (Reuters) -China said it could take legal action against any individual or organisation assisting or implementing U.S. measures that advise companies against using advanced semiconductors from China. The U.S. published guidance last week saying companies risk violating export controls if they use Ascend AI chips from Shenzhen-based Huawei. China's commerce ministry said there could be "corresponding legal liabilities" against those involved in the implementation of U.S. measures which it said could constitute "discriminatory restrictive measures" against Chinese firms. China urges the U.S. to abide by international economic and trade rules and respect other countries' rights to scientific and technological development, a ministry spokesperson said in a statement. (Reporting by Liz Lee and Shanghai newsroom; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

China warns of legal consequences to those involved in US chip measures

China warns of legal consequences to those involved in US chip measures BEIJING (Reuters) -China said it could take legal action against any...
Charges dropped against conservative activist in Texas over false voter fraud claimNew Foto - Charges dropped against conservative activist in Texas over false voter fraud claim

HOUSTON (AP) — Texas prosecutors on Tuesday dropped charges against a prominent conservative activist in Houston related to allegations he had been part of what authorities have called a baseless voter fraud conspiracy theory in which a man was run off the road and held at gunpoint over claims he was holding fraudulent voter ballots. Dr. Steven Hotze, 74, had been facing four charges related to allegedly helping plan an assault against an air conditioner repairman in October 2020. Prosecutors alleged the repairman was run off the road and held at gunpoint byMark Aguirre, a former Houston police officer. Aguirre had worked for a firm hired by Liberty Center for God and Country, a nonprofit organization that Hotze runs, to pursue a voter fraud investigation. Aguirre had claimed the repairman was the mastermind of the voter fraud scheme and that the man's truck had been filled with fraudulent ballots when Aguirre ran his SUV into it, according to authorities. Police who responded to the incident searched the repairman's truck and found only air conditioning parts and tools, prosecutors said. Hotze was charged with four counts — aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, engaging in organized crime and unlawful restraint. On Tuesday, the Harris County District Attorney's Office dropped all four counts against Hotze and three of the five counts against Aguirre, who is still facing charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and unlawful restraint. "This deeply troubling case shows how toxic conspiracy theories can fuel real-world violence that endangers people in our community," Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare said in a statement. "We look forward to vigorously prosecuting the remaining charges in this case that stand up to legal scrutiny." Jared Woodfill, Hotze's attorney, said he was surprised but pleased by the dismissal of the charges. "It's been a long four-year journey for Dr. Hotze. It cost him a lot of money. Obviously, they tried to destroy his reputation through the negative publicity. But in the end, justice was served and everything's been dismissed," Woodfill said. Terry Yates, an attorney for Aguirre, did not immediately return a call or email seeking comment. A conservative power broker, Hotze has a long history of filing election-related lawsuits, including unsuccessfully suing to stop the extension of early voting in Texas during the 2022 election. He also sued officials in Harris County to limit in-person and absentee voting, making allegations without evidence that Democrats were engaged in "ballot harvesting" by gathering votes from individuals who are homeless or elderly. Woodfill said Hotze continues to believe that voter fraud is taking place in Harris County, the state's most populous county and where Houston is located. "I think everybody will tell you there's voter fraud. Just the question is how much," Woodfill said. Texas has tightened its voter laws in recent years and increased penalties that Democrats and opponents say are attempts to suppress turnout among Black and Latino voters. Elections in Harris County, a Democratic stronghold, have been heavily scrutinized in recent years by GOP lawmakers, including Gov. Greg Abbott, after problems with ballot and worker shortages, long lines and ballots that were not counted the day of the election. In 2023, Abbott signed a bill that removedHarris County's elections administratorand transferred the responsibility to other local officials. Earlier this month, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxtonannounced indictments against six peoplein a rural county southwest of San Antonio as part of a widening elections investigation. ___ Follow Juan A. Lozano:https://twitter.com/juanlozano70

Charges dropped against conservative activist in Texas over false voter fraud claim

Charges dropped against conservative activist in Texas over false voter fraud claim HOUSTON (AP) — Texas prosecutors on Tuesday dropped char...

 

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