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From: FBI News Briefing
To: "FBINewsBriefing"
Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Daily News Briefing - March 13, 2024
Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2024 10:10:02 +0000
Importance: Normal
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Federal Bureau of Investigation
Seal
March 13, 2024
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Daily News Briefing
(In coordination with the Office of Public Affairs)
Email Public Affairs to subscribe to the Daily News Briefing. Mobile version and archive available here.
Table of Contents
IN THE NEWS
• Continued Reporting: Intelligence Officials Testify on Global Threats Before Senate Intelligence
Committee
• Robert Hur Defends Special Counsel Report at Tense House Hearing on Biden Documents Probe
• TikTok Focuses on Senate as House Heads Toward Divestment Vote
• A Former Boeing Manager Who Raised Safety Concerns Appears to Have Taken His Own Life, Coroner
Says
• Pentagon Will Give Ukraine $300 Million in Weapons Even As It Lacks Funds to Replenish US Stockpile
• Uvalde Police Chief Who Was on Vacation During Robb Elementary Shooting Resigns
COUNTERTERRORISM
• Man Who Sent Bomb Threat to Arizona Election Officials Jailed for 42 Months
• Opinion: The FBI's Silent Battle Against Iranian Sleeper Cells
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
• U.S. Lawmaker Cited NYC Protests in a Defense of Warrantless Spying
• Bob Menendez's Bribery Case Reminds Us Why Proving Corruption Is So Hard
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
• Ghislaine Maxwell's Lawyer Tells Appeals Judges That Jeffrey Epstein's Florida Plea Deal Protects Her
• Republicans Subpoenaed 15 Years of Hunter Biden Phone Records, Democrats Reveal
• Ex-Mar-a-Lago Employee Says He Unwittingly Helped Load Trump Classified Papers Onto Plane
• New Mexico Launches Real-Time Data Portal for Missing and Murdered Indigenous People
• Warden Ousted From Federal Women's Prison Plagued by Sex Abuse
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• Officials Warn of 'Alarming Increase' in Sex Attacks on Female Plane Passengers
• FBI Warns Families of Sextortion, a Growing Threat Targeting Teen Boys in Philadelphia
• Former Jacksonville Jaguars Employee Who Stole $22 Million Sentenced to Three Years in Jail
• Brooklyn Pastor 'Bling Bishop' Found Guilty of Spending $90,000 of His Parishioner's Savings on
Luxury Goods
• Border Shooting in California: Marksman Killed Man Assaulting Migrants
• Maine Man Charged by FBI Over Online Threats to Kill President Biden, Immigrants
• Bryan Kohberger Attorney's Appeal of Grand Jury Indictment Denied by Idaho Supreme Court
• FBI Technology Being Used to Help Solve Suburban Chicago Teen's Murder
• 'Mastermind' of International Marriage Fraud Ring Gets 22 Months Behind Bars
• Suspects in California Valentine's Day Homicide Arrested in New York City
CYBER DIVISION
• Feds Seize $1.4 Million of Tech Support Scam Proceeds With the Help of Crypto Firm
• Healthcare Hit Hardest by Ransomware Last Year, FBI IC3 Report Shows
• Scammers Raked in $1.3B From Impersonation Scams in 2023, FBI Says
• What Happens When Cyberattacks Do Physical Harm?
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
• FBI Seeks Location of New Jersey Man Who Went Missing in Italy in 2019
• 'Treaties Don't Work': Wanted Western Fugitives Hide in Wartime Russia
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
• Trump Says He Will Free Jan. 6 Rioters on First Day if Re-Elected
• Capitol Police Defend Actions Surrounding Pipe Bombs Found Jan. 6
• House GOP Report Alleges Jan 6 Committee 'Deleted Records and Hid Evidence'
• Missouri Woman Sentenced to Jail for Repeated Probation Violations in Capitol Riot Case
• Trump Was Informed of Prohibited Items in Jan. 6 Rally Crowd, His Driver Testified
OTHER FBI NEWS
• Fort Leonard Wood Soldiers Visit FBI Office to Learn About the Bureau
• FBI Albany Hosting Event to Recruit Women Into Law Enforcement
• SMX Back in the Running for a Spot on $7B FBI Contract
• U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro Pushes for Release of FBI, CIA Files on Latino Civil Rights Leaders
• In States With Laws Targeting LGBTQ Issues, School Hate Crimes Quadrupled
• Opinion: FBI Dallas: Reflecting on a Successful Year
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
• China Leads the World in Hypersonic Technology
• Detectives Looking for Missing Students Have Been Found After Disappearing in Mexican State
• Switzerland to Try Syria's Rifaat Al-Assad for War Crimes
• Gaza Airdrops Take Huge Effort and Don't Solve Hunger Crisis
• Palestinians Describe Beatings, Stress Positions, Other Alleged Abuses in Israeli Detention
• Israel and Hezbollah Exchange Fire as Tensions Flare
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• Council That Would Rule Haiti Must Navigate Gangs, Other Powerful Forces
• Kenya Hits Pause on Police Deployment to Haiti
• Top Navalny Aide Attacked With Hammer Outside Home in Lithuania
• Zimbabwe, After Expelling U.S. Officials, Accuses Them of Promoting 'Regime Change'
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
• High-Stakes Rematch Is Set as Biden, Trump Clinch Party Nominations
• How an Obscure Biden Immigration Policy Became So Controversial
• House Democrats Try to Bypass Speaker Johnson to Force Vote on Ukraine Aid
• U.S. Says F-35 Fighter Jet Program Achieves Full-Rate Production
• What Is the President's True Role in the Federal Budget Process?
• Judge Approves Trump's $92 Million Bond to Cover Jury Award in E. Jean Carroll Defamation Case
• Texas Tells Biden New Immigrant Processing Facility Is 'An Expensive Band-Aid on a Gunshot Wound'
• White House Says Five American Hostages Now Held by Hamas After Itay Chen Death
BIG PICTURE
• New York Times
• Wall Street Journal
• Washington Post
• Financial Times
• ABC News
• CBS News
• NBC News
• Fox News
WASHINGTON SCHEDULE
IN THE NEWS
Continued Reporting: Intelligence Officials Testify on Global Threats Before Senate Intelligence Committee
NewsNation (03/12, Shirazi) reported that intelligence officials testified before Congress, highlighting concerns
about a "fragile world order" and significant terror threats, including smuggling networks at the southern U.S.
border potentially tied to ISIS. According to the article, Director Wray, along with other intelligence leaders,
mentioned that the U.S. faces a wide range of threats, from homegrown extremists to state-sponsored
organizations. Director Wray specifically pointed out the FBI's monitoring of an ISIS-affiliated group and the
agency's efforts to investigate smuggling networks with ISIS ties, without specifying any particular threats or plots.
"There's a particular network that has whereas some of the overseas facilitators of the smuggling network have ISIS
ties that were very concerned about and that we've been spending an enormous amount of effort with our
partners investigating exactly what that network is up to is something that's again the subject of our current
investigation," Director Wray said. AI Jazeera (03/12, Staff Writer) added that emotions rose in the hearing as some
senators discussed immigration across the U.S. border with Mexico. Director Wray expressed concern about the
"terrorism implications from potential targeting of vulnerabilities at the border", noting rising threats from US
nationals inspired by armed groups and other foreign fighters since Hamas's attack on Israel on October 7.
Newsweek (03/12, Mordowanec) reported that Director Wray outlined concerns regarding several categories of
individuals at the U.S. border, particularly emphasizing the threat posed by known or suspected terrorists. Director
Wray detailed the collaborative efforts between the FBI and the DHS but expressed significant concerns over
individuals using fake identification documents to enter the U.S. undetected. "There are a few different categories
of people that we have concerns about," Director Wray said. He elaborated on the process when a known or
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suspected terrorist is apprehended at the border, "When a known or suspected terrorist, as in known that they're a
known or suspected terrorist is apprehended at the border, I'm confident in the vast majority of instances there's
very close lash-up between FBI and DHS on it." However, Director Wray pointed out a critical vulnerability, "The
bigger concern is a situation, for example, where somebody presents fake identification documents at the border
and there's not biometrics to match up—so there's no way to be able to know that they're not who they say they
are. Then, they get into the country; then somehow we find out that they're someone in fact who's on the list." In
response to Sen. Jon Ossoff's inquiry regarding the threat level of terrorism associated with unlawful entry through
the southern border, Director Wray underscored the gravity of the situation, especially in light of recent global
events. "We are concerned about the terrorism implications from potential targeting of vulnerabilities at the
border," Director Wray responded. He further noted the escalated threat level due to various extremist groups,
"Well, even before October 7, I would have told this committee that we were at a heightened threat level from a
terrorism perspective," Director Wray remarked, emphasizing the unique situation of facing elevated threats from
homegrown violent extremists, domestic violent extremists, foreign terrorist organizations, and state-sponsored
terrorist organizations simultaneously. Bloomberg (03/12, Martin) also quoted Director Wray: "You've seen a
veritable rogue's gallery of foreign terrorist organizations calling for terrorist attacks against us in a way that we
haven't seen in a long, long time," Director Wray told the House Intelligence Committee. "This is a time not for
panic, but for heightened vigilance given the risk," Director Wray said. Newsmax (03/12, McCarthy) reported
that Vice Chairman Marco Rubio asked Director Wray whether the FBI has seen crimes committed by people with
ties to foreign gangs or other criminal organizations. "From an FBI perspective, we are seeing a wide array of very
dangerous threats that emanate from the border, and that includes everything from the drug trafficking, and the
FBI alone sees enough fentanyl in the last two years to kill 270 million people," Director Wray said. "That's just on
the fentanyl side. An awful lot of violent crime in the United States is at the hands of gangs who are themselves
involved in the distribution of that fentanyl."
U.S. Intel Chief Says She Can't Rule out Possibility That China Will Use TikTok to Influence 2024 Elections
CNN (03/12, Lyngaas) and Reuters (03/12, Martina, Zengerle) reported that the Director of National Intelligence
Avril Haines and other U.S. intelligence officials testified before the House Intelligence Committee, stating that they
"cannot rule out" the possibility of the Chinese government using TikTok to influence the 2024 U.S. elections.
According to the article, this concern follows reports of TikTok being used for propaganda efforts during the 2022
midterm elections, as outlined in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence's annual Threat Assessment
report. The article added that Director Wray highlighted the difficulty in detecting influence operations via TikTok's
algorithm, describing it as a "pernicious risk," and expressed concerns about the Chinese government potentially
pressuring TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, to disseminate disinformation to Americans. "When it comes to
TikTok's algorithm and the recommendation algorithm, and the ability to conduct influence operations, that is
extraordinarily difficult to detect and that's what makes it such a pernicious risk; Director Wray told lawmakers at
Tuesday's hearing. The article noted that Director Wray and other US officials have argued that the Chinese
government could pressure TikTok's owner ByteDance to effectively weaponize its algorithm to target Americans
with disinformation.
Hamas Likely to Pose Armed Threat to Israel 'For Years to Come'
Times of Israel (03/12, Magid) reported that the annual U.S. intelligence threat assessment reported that Israel will
likely face armed resistance from Hamas for years, as efforts to neutralize Hamas's tunnel network in Gaza will be
challenging. According to the article, this comes after Hamas's attack on southern Israel on October 7, which
escalated tensions in the region, with Iranian proxies conducting anti-US and anti-Israel attacks. U.S. Director of
National Intelligence Avril Haines mentioned in her testimony that terror groups like al-Qaeda and the Islamic
State, inspired by Hamas, are targeting Israelis and U.S. interests, suggesting that the Gaza conflict could have a
generational impact on terrorism.
Nation's Spy Chiefs Say Russia Poses National Security Threat
Spectrum Local News (03/12, Leigh) reported that the nation's spy chiefs testified before the House Intelligence
Committee, expressing concern that Russia's war against Ukraine could spread to other Western countries.
According to the article, they urged Congress to pass a bill providing $60 billion in aid to Ukraine to support its
military efforts against Russian aggression. "You can already see the Ukrainian military rationing ammunition. You
can already see them becoming more vulnerable to Russian attacks from the air, from drones, from missiles, from
aircraft," said CIA director William Burns. "That's the future we're going to see, I think, without providing them the
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munitions that they've used so effectively in the past which I believe are the key to a serious negotiation down the
road."
U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro Pushes for Release of FBI, CIA Files on Latino Civil Rights Leaders
The San Antonio Express-News (03/12, Wermund) reported that U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro called on U.S. intelligence
leaders to declassify and release files on the surveillance of Latino civil rights leaders, including labor leader Cesar
Chavez. According to the article, Castro sought commitments from CIA Director William J. Burns and Director Wray
to improve the historical record by releasing materials related to the surveillance of Latino civil rights organizations,
to which they responded positively. The request was part of efforts to correct historical records and ensure
transparency regarding the monitoring and information collection on activists and organizations within the Latino
civil rights movement, highlighting the need to confront and address past overreaches by U.S. intelligence agencies.
Robert Hur Defends Special Counsel Report at Tense House Hearing on Biden Documents Probe
CNN (03/12, Herb, Cohen) and Associated Press (03/12, Megerian) reported that former Special Counsel Robert
Hur testified before Congress about his investigation into President Joe Biden's mishandling of classified
documents, leading to no charges against Biden. According to the articles, Hur refuted claims that Biden was
"senile," despite describing him as an "elderly man with a poor memory" in his report. Hur emphasized that his
report did not "exonerate" Biden, a point of contention during the hearing. The articles explained that the hearing,
charged with political undertones ahead of the 2024 presidential election, saw Democrats highlighting differences
between the cases of Biden and former President Donald Trump, while Republicans questioned the fairness in the
decision not to prosecute Biden. The articles noted that Hur maintained a neutral stance, focusing solely on the
findings of his report and avoiding political speculation. Newsmax (03/12, Morley III) and Breitbart (03/12,
Gilbertson) reported that during a congressional hearing, Director Wray declined to confirm if President Joe Biden
mishandled classified information post-vice presidency in 2017, following revelations from Robert Hur's
investigation. According to the articles, despite Hur's report indicating Biden retained and likely shared classified
documents with his book's ghostwriter, Director Wray, when questioned by Rep. Elise Stefanik, refrained from
commenting on the specifics of the mishandling and cited "counterintelligence" for his vague responses. The
articles assessed that this stance was consistent with Director Wray's previous behavior of evasion in congressional
testimonies, including a 2022 incident where he left a Senate oversight hearing early for a family vacation.
Additional reporting on the story was provided by The National Desk (03/12, Denean), NBC News (03/12, Memoli),
The Hill (03/12, Staff Writer), New York Times (03/12, Thrush, Broadwater), two articles from Fox News (03/12,
Pandolfo, Spunt), two articles from Politico (03/12, Adragna), two articles from Axios (03/12, Doherty, Rubin), Al
Jazeera (03/12, Staff Writer), Washington Post (03/12, Blake), ABC News (03/12, Bruggeman, Mallin, et al.), two
articles from USA Today (03/12, Crowley, Robledo, et al.), NPR (03/12, Lucas, McDaniel, Keith), two articles from
CBS News (03/12, Farhi), BBC (03/12, Zurcher), and The Guardian (03/12, Greve). The Wall Street Journal (03/12,
Editorial) provided an editorial on the story.
TikTok Focuses on Senate as House Heads Toward Divestment Vote
Reuters (03/12, Shepardson) reported that the U.S. House of Representatives is set to vote on a bill that would
require ByteDance to divest TikTok within six months or face a ban, amid concerns about the app's Chinese
ownership and potential risks to American users. The article explained that ahead of the vote, the FBI, Justice
Department, and Office of the Director of National Intelligence provided a classified briefing to House members,
highlighting the risks posed by the Chinese Communist Party through TikTok's operations. While the bill aims to
protect U.S. national security and user data by removing Chinese ownership of TikTok, its fate in the Senate
remains uncertain, even as President Joe Biden indicated he would sign it. The article noted that the legislation has
sparked debate over free expression rights and the impact on business owners and content creators. Additional
reporting on the story was provided by Associated Press (03/12, O'Brien), Bloomberg (03/12, Flatley, Wasson,
Barinka), The Economist (03/12, Staff Writer), Washington Post (03/12, Gregg, Strong), Wall Street Journal (03/12,
Woo, Wells, Huang), Politico (03/12, Kern), CNN (03/12, Fung), Rolling Stone (03/12, Ramirez, Suebsaeng), The Hill
(03/12, Klar, Shapero), The Atlantic (03/12, Kelley), and Axios (03/12, Sabin). Newsweek (03/12, Tracey) posted an
opinion on the story.
A Former Boeing Manager Who Raised Safety Concerns Appears to Have Taken His Own Life, Coroner Says
The Associated Press (3/12, Staff Writer) and the New York Times (3/12, Ember) reported that a former manager at
Boeing who was a whistleblower about safety practices of the company was found dead outside of a hotel in
Charleston, SC in an apparent act of suicide. The articles stated that John Barnett, a former quality manager at
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Boeing, was found dead in a car outside a Holiday Inn from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
The articles explained that Barnett had been involved in several whistleblower cases regarding concerns over
quality and safety at Boeing, including discarded metal shavings near wiring for flight controls, and problems with
the oxygen system on the Boeing 787. The articles noted that the Charleston County Police Department is actively
investigating the case, and awaiting a formal cause of death, as well as any additional findings that might shed light
on the circumstances of Barnett's death. The Washington Post (3/12, Duncan, Aratani) added that at the time of his
death, Barnett was due to finish the final day of depositions ahead of a June trial date in another whistleblower
case he filed against Boeing in 2017. The article also explained that the previous week, the National Transportation
Safety Board issued a preliminary report about an incident in which a United Airlines 737 Max experienced a stuck
rudder pedal, and which Boeing said it had addressed the problem. This story was also reported on by CNN (3/12,
Riess, Alonso), NPR (3/12, Chappell), Reuters (3/12, Staff Writer), ABC News (3/12, Ordonez, Maile),
Bloomberg (3/12, Vercoe), NBC News (3/12, Smith, Li, Sheeley), CBS News (3/12, Breen), Al Jazeera (3/12, Staff
Writer), The Guardian (3/12, Jones), USA TODAY (3/12, Lagatta), Fox Business (3/12, Vacchiano), and Forbes (3/12,
Garcia).
Pentagon Will Give Ukraine $300 Million in Weapons Even As It Lacks Funds to Replenish US Stockpile
The Associated Press (3/12, Groves) and the Wall Street Journal (3/12, Youssef, Gordon) reported a White House
announcement on Tuesday that the Pentagon plans to send about $300 million in weapons to Ukraine after finding
some cost savings in its contracts. The articles stated that while this is the first announced security package since
December, it wasn't until recently that Pentagon officials publicly acknowledged they weren't just out of money to
buy replacement weapons, but $10 billion overdrawn. The articles explained that US officials have insisted for
months that the US wouldn't be able to resume weapons deliveries until Congress provided additional
replenishment funds, which are part of the supplemental spending bill stalled in Congress. The articles added that
the Pentagon also has a separate Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, which allows it to fund longer-term
contracts with the defense industry to produce new weapons for Ukraine. The articles also described a last effort
by House Democrats to force a vote on the aid bill for Ukraine and Israel, as they would begin accepting signatures
on a discharge petition Tuesday morning which allows rank-and-file members to bypass House leaders and put
legislation directly on the floor provided they can garner 218 signatures—or a majority of the seats in the House.
This story was also reported on by the New York Times (3/12, Cooper, Schmitt), Reuters (3/12, Stone, Ali, Zengerle,
Mason), ABC News (3/12, Stoddart, Seyler, Gomez), Axios (3/12, Saric), CNN (3/12, Liebermann, Britzky, Bertrand),
NBC News (3/12, Kube, Lee, Alba), Politico (3/12, Seligman, Ward), The Hill (3/12, Mitchell), USA TODAY (3/12,
Brook, Collins), and Barron's (3/12, Kemp).
Uvalde Police Chief Who Was on Vacation During Robb Elementary Shooting Resigns
The Associated Press (3/13, Coronado) and the Washington Post (3/12, Kaur) reported that the Uvalde police chief
who was on vacation during the Robb Elementary School shooting submitted his resignation Tuesday, less than a
week after a report ordered by the city defended the police department's response to the attack but outraged
some family members of those who were killed. The articles stated that before a Uvalde City Council meeting,
Uvalde Police Chief Daniel Rodriguez submitted his resignation letter, and then did not attend the meeting. The
articles noted that the US DO1 had carried a report submitted last January that laid out critical failures of the
Uvalde Police Department during the shooting. The New York Times (3/12, Sandoval) added that the chiefs
resignation would be effective on April 6, and in the meantime, Assistant Chief of police, Homer Delgado, would
serve as the interim police chief while a search for a replacement is conducted. This story was also reported on by
NBC News (3/12, Burke, Helsel), Reuters (3/12, Brooks), CBS News (3/12, Falcon), Axios (3/12, Habeshian), The
Hill (3/12, Timotija), Fox News (3/12, Wehner), and USA TODAY (3/12, Gomez).
Back to Top
COUNTERTERRORISM
Man Who Sent Bomb Threat to Arizona Election Officials Jailed for 42 Months
The Guardian (03/12, Pilkington) reported that James Clark, a 38-year-old Massachusetts man, was sentenced to 42
months in prison for threatening to bomb the Arizona Secretary of State in 2021, as part of a broader wave of
threats against election officials following false claims about the 2020 presidential election. According to the
article, the sentence, delivered by Judge Michael Liburdi, aimed to deter such threats and protect democracy,
highlighting the impact of intimidation on election officials' willingness to serve. The article noted that the case was
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prosecuted by the election threats task force within the DOJ, and the FBI arrested individuals in separate incidents
for violent threats against election officials in Arizona, demonstrating federal efforts to combat this trend of
harassment against public servants.
Opinion: The FBI's Silent Battle Against Iranian Sleeper Cells
An opinion piece from the Jerusalem Post (03/12, Fard) reported that the FBI is engaged in a silent battle against
Iranian sleeper cells within the United States, focusing on the threat these cells pose to national security. According
to the article, these cells are linked to the Islamic Republic of Iran and are part of a broader strategy to destabilize
through fear and retaliation. The FBI's efforts extend to monitoring various entities with ties to Tehran, amidst
concerns over Iran's tactics, including the assassination of key figures associated with former President Donald
Trump. The author assessed that the FBI's engagement in a silent but critical battle against Iranian sleeper cells
represents a vital front in the broader struggle to safeguard national security and democratic values against the
threats of foreign-sponsored terrorism and espionage.
Back to Top
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
U.S. Lawmaker Cited NYC Protests in a Defense of Warrantless Spying
WIRED (03/12, Cameron) reported that in a closed-door presentation aimed at defending warrantless spying under
Section 702, House Intelligence Chair Mike Turner suggested ties between NYC anti-war protesters and Hamas to
argue against privacy reforms. According to the article, this session, and a parallel briefing for Democrats, aimed to
dissuade support for reforms that would require the FBI to obtain warrants before accessing Americans'
communications collected under the program. The article noted that the FBI conducted "tens of thousands" of
queries related to "civil unrest" between 2020 and early 2021, illustrating the broad use of surveillance powers and
sparking concerns over the potential for reverse targeting and the erosion of privacy rights in the context of
political protests and beyond.
Bob Menendez's Bribery Case Reminds Us Why Proving Corruption Is So Hard
The New York Times (03/12, Feuer) reported that Senator Bob Menendez of New Jersey was arraigned in a federal
bribery case brought by an FBI investigation, facing new charges for accepting cash, gold bars, and a Mercedes-
Benz convertible in exchange for attempting to disrupt criminal cases and misuse his Senate Foreign Relations
Committee position. According to the article, this follows a 2017 trial where jurors were uncertain if the gifts and
favors he received were illegal or typical of friendship. The Supreme Court's 2016 decision, which narrowed the
definition of corruption by requiring a specific quid pro quo for conviction, has made prosecuting such cases
challenging. However, recent retrials and a focus on explicit quid pro quo have led to convictions, signaling a
potential shift in how these cases might be approached, including Menendez's, which relies on new charges.
Back to Top
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
Ghislaine Maxwell's Lawyer Tells Appeals Judges That Jeffrey Epstein's Florida Plea Deal Protects Her
The Associated Press (03/12, Neumeister) reported that imprisoned British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell's lawyer
asked a federal appeals court Tuesday to toss out her sex trafficking conviction and 20-year prison sentence, saying
Jeffrey Epstein's 2007 non-prosecution deal with a U.S. attorney in Florida should have prevented her prosecution.
The article added that attorney Diana Fabi Samson's argument was repeatedly challenged by one judge on the 2nd
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals before the three-judge panel reserved decision. Lawyers for Maxwell are challenging
her December 2021 conviction on multiple grounds, but the only topic at oral arguments was whether the deal
Epstein struck in Florida to prevent a federal case against him there also protected Maxwell in New York. Samson
said it did. A prosecutor said it didn't. Maxwell, 62, is serving her sentence at a low-security federal prison in
Tallahassee, Florida, where yoga, Pilates, and movies are available. According to the article, Epstein's lawyers made
a similar argument about the force of his non-prosecution deal in Florida after his July 2019, sex trafficking arrest in
Manhattan. But the legal question became moot in his case after he took his own life a month later in a federal
lockup as he awaited trial. ABC News (03/12, Katersky, Hill), BBC (03/12, Wendling), Business Insider (03/12,
Shamsian), Independent (03/12, Bedigan), Fox News (03/12, Ruiz), Washington Examiner (03/12, Deese), Reuters
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(03/12, Stempel), New York Post (03/12, Kochman), and the Daily Beast (03/12, Briquelet) also reported on the
story.
Republicans Subpoenaed 15 Years of Hunter Biden Phone Records, Democrats Reveal
The Hill (03/12, Beitsch) reported that House Republicans have subpoenaed AT&T for 15 years of Hunter Biden's
phone records, Democrats revealed on Tuesday, the latest sign that GOP lawmakers are plowing ahead with their
impeachment inquiry into President Biden despite his son testifying that his father was not involved in his business
ventures. The article added that the subpoena — issued last week but first disclosed in a Democratic memo — asks
AT&T to provide information "regarding the account information, communication records, and payment history of
all AT&T accounts affiliated with Robert Hunter Biden," as part of the GOP impeachment inquiry into the president.
The article mentioned that House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-KY) said the records are "probative"
of whether Joe Biden communicated with Hunter Biden's business associates if Hunter Biden was communicating
with his father during important parts of his business dealings, and if the president's son was speaking with other
Executive Branch officials. The article noted that the move by Comer comes after the FBI arrested a former
informant on charges related to lying to the agency about the president accepting a bribe — undercutting a key
element of the GOP's probe. But the memo from House Democrats criticizes Republicans for failing to disclose the
recent subpoena as it has with other demands of the president's family. The Huffington Post (03/12, Delaney), and
the Daily Mail (03/12, Phillips) also reported on the story.
Ex-Mar-a-Lago Employee Says He Unwittingly Helped Load Trump Classified Papers Onto Plane
The Independent (03/12, Baio) reported that Brian Butler, a former Mar-a-Lago employee who has publicly
identified himself as a witness in the classified documents case against Donald Trump, recounted how he
unknowingly helped load boxes of those documents onto the former president's plane on CNN's The Source with
Kaitlin Collins. The article added that Butler, a valet and manager at Mar-a-Lago, said that in June 2022 he and Walt
Nauta, another former employee who is also a co-defendant in the case, loaded approximately 10 to 15 white
banker's boxes from a car to Trump's plane. The article stated that Butler said he had "no clue" the boxes contained
potential national security secrets at the time. He recalled that he often helped load the Trump family's luggage or
the former president's things from cars to the plane. It wasn't until later that Butler realized those boxes, the same
ones that appeared in the government's indictment, contained classified information. The article noted that Butler,
who revealed himself to be "Trump Employee 5" in the government's case against the former president, said he is
coming forward with his story and identity now to get ahead of speculation before the trial begins. MSNBC (03/12,
Benen) also reported on the story.
Analysis: There's New Reason to Think Trump Still Has Classified Documents
An analysis piece by the Washington Post (03/12, Bump) stated that the central reason that Donald Trump was
indicted for retaining documents marked as classified but President Biden was not is that Trump tried to retain the
documents once the government sought their return. This is not a matter of opinion; it is, instead, the distinction
drawn by special counsel Robert K. Hur when he declined to seek charges against Biden. Trump was known to have
documents and tried to keep them. Hence the indictment. The author noted that on Monday afternoon,
CNN published an interview with a former Mar-a-Lago employee that bolsters one of the lingering possibilities
surrounding Trump's action; that he may still have documents at one of his other properties. The author
mentioned that the FBI's 2022 search for documents was limited to Trump's Palm Beach estate. The FBI gathered
scores of documents from a storage room near the pool and from Trump's personal office.
New Mexico Launches Real-Time Data Portal for Missing and Murdered Indigenous People
KRQE (CBS-13) (03/12, Segarra) reported that New Mexico's attorney general has launched a site for real-time data
on missing Indigenous people. The idea is to help boost communication around the issue. The article added that
the portal currently lists 201 missing Indigenous people in New Mexico. The average time missing is 2,886 days, the
data reveals. Most of the current missing individuals are middle-aged, although the data shows 31 missing
Indigenous individuals below the age of 20. On the portal, individuals can find info on filing new reports for missing
individuals. The portal is just one part of the larger effort to reduce the number of missing and murdered
Indigenous people. The federal government recently released info in its efforts to address the problem as well. The
article quoted FBI Special Agent in Charge Raul Bujanda, who said, "We fully support our partners at the New
Mexico Department of Justice (NMDOJ) as they roll out this important initiative, although our state, and the Navajo
Nation, has access to the most accurate data on missing persons in the country, their work will offer families
transparency while providing additional state focused tools to ensure proper reporting for their loved ones. Along
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with support from our partners, this more robust MMIP effort undertaken by the NMDO1 makes all of New Mexico
a safer place."
Warden Ousted From Federal Women's Prison Plagued by Sex Abuse
The New York Times (03/12, Arango) reported that the warden of a federal women's prison in Northern California
that has long been plagued by rampant sexual abuse was ousted from his job after a raid on the facility by FBI
agents. The article added that the federal government said in a court filing on Monday that it had removed the
acting warden, Arthur Dulgov, as well as the associate warden and two other top leaders at the Federal
Correctional Institution, Dublin. The Federal Bureau of Prisons said it had installed new leaders to overhaul the
facility in Dublin, Calif., about 40 miles east of San Francisco. The article noted that the scandal has resulted in an
avalanche of litigation and allegations that sexual abuse has continued despite past leadership shake-ups. A
spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons, in a statement, said the firings and the appointments of new leaders were
meant to "create a positive change in culture" at the minimum-security prison. Nancy T. McKinney, a longtime
Bureau of Prisons official, was installed as the interim warden. According to the article, the changes came hours
after FBI agents raided the prison, carried away documents and computers, and sought to interview prison
employees. Forbes (03/12, Pavlo) also reported on the story.
Officials Warn of 'Alarming Increase' in Sex Attacks on Female Plane Passengers
The Independent (03/12, Gooding) reported that two offenders have pleaded guilty to separate incidents of sexual
assault on planes flying into Seattle, as prosecutors warn that reports of incidents keep on coming. On Friday, Jack
Roberson, 69, entered his guilty plea over an incident on a flight from Vancouver in July 2023. The article noted
that the FBI investigated 27 sexual misconduct cases aboard aircraft in 2018. By 2022 that number had more than
tripled to 90 cases. By August 2023 62 cases were under investigation. That trend appears to have continued, with
the attorney announcing another indictment in the past week. The article mentioned that in August 2023, FBI
Special Agent Richard A Collodi said the bureau was committed to investigating such crimes. The article
quoted Collodi, who said, "It is imperative for people to understand those who commit these types of crimes
aboard aircraft will be held accountable, I'm concerned at the increase of these incidents and assure the traveling
public the FBI and our partners will continue to investigate and prosecute any offender who victimizes someone on
a plane." In 2022, the FBI explained that sexual assaults on aircraft were often different from other scenarios, as
the victims tend to not know the perpetrator.
FBI Warns Families of Sextortion, a Growing Threat Targeting Teen Boys in Philadelphia
CBS News (03/12, Crawford) reported that sextortion is on the rise in the Philadelphia area, and the FBI wants
minors and families to be aware of the crime. Sextortion is when someone online poses as a young person,
convinces a real teenager to send them explicit photos and then once they have the photos, the scammer
blackmails the young person for money. The threats become so intense, that the FBI says sextortion has led to at
least 20 suicides nationwide. The article added that according to the FBI, the connection between criminals and
teens can start anywhere young people communicate online, including a messaging platform, app, or video game.
Step one for the scammer is getting a sexually explicit picture from a teenager. The article quoted Alexis Krieger, a
victims specialist with FBI Philadelphia, who said, "That reciprocity. I'll show you if you show me. Sometimes they
have photos from other victims that they then use to entice that child, almost a catfishing kind of scam," The article
stated that the crime has become more common in the last few years. According to FBI statistics, there were 14
reports of sextortion in 2021 in the Philadelphia region. In 2022, that number jumped to 110, and in 2023, there
were 130 reports. The article quoted Donald Asper, a Supervisory Special Agent with FBI Philadelphia, who
said, "It's not just a single actor, you're looking at organizations, you're looking at people that this is their sole
source of income, often they're overseas, so this makes it harder to track down."
Former Jacksonville Jaguars Employee Who Stole $22 Million Sentenced to Three Years in Jail
The Associated Press (03/12, Long) reported that a former Jacksonville Jaguars financial manager who pled guilty to
stealing more than $22 million from the NFL franchise through its virtual credit card program was sentenced to 78
months in federal prison Tuesday. The article added that Judge Henry Lee Adams Jr. sentenced Amit Patel, 31, in
the U.S. District Court in Jacksonville. Patel, wearing a charcoal suit and a burgundy tie, showed no emotion inside
the packed courthouse as the punishment was handed down. Prosecutors said Patel has returned $1.89 million,
leaving his restitution tab at $21,132,454.40 — a figure the judge acknowledged he will never be able to pay back
following a felony conviction. Patel pled guilty in December to one count of wire fraud and one count of making an
illegal monetary transaction. According to the article, Patel's lawyers said he gambled away "approximately 99%" of
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the misappropriated money and said his gambling losses totaled $32 million. Patel gambled on prominent websites
at the Jaguars' facility, which triggered an NFL investigation. The NFL met with Patel in February and then turned
the case over to the FBI. The Jaguars subsequently suspended and eventually fired Patel, who began working for
the team in 2018. UPI (03/12, Benson), Washington Post (03/12, Bieler), ABC News (03/12, Dirocco), Bleacher
Report (03/12, Polacek), and Fox News (03/12, Dedaj) also reported on the story.
Brooklyn Pastor 'Bling Bishop' Found Guilty of Spending $90,000 of His Parishioner's Savings on Luxury
Goods
CNN (03/12, Anderson, Balarajan) reported that a flashy, jewelry-wearing Brooklyn pastor was convicted Monday in
federal court of using a parishioner's retirement savings and trying to extort a businessman while touting he had
connections to the New York City mayor. The article added that Lamor Whitehead nicknamed the "Bling Bishop," is
a pastor at the Leaders of Tomorrow International Ministries. He was found guilty of five counts, including wire
fraud, attempted extortion, and making false statements to the FBI. The convictions are from three separate
schemes. Whitehead, known for his Louis Vuitton suits and extravagant jewelry, also made headlines in 2022 after
he said he and his wife were robbed of $1 million worth of jewelry at their church. The Daily Beast (03/12,
Olmsted), CBS News (03/12, Video), and Fox News (03/12, Dorgan) also reported on the story.
Border Shooting in California: Marksman Killed Man Assaulting Migrants
The Los Angeles Times (03/12, Toohey) reported that a man fatally shot by a border patrol marksman earlier this
month near the California-Mexico border was gunned down because he was threatening migrants with a firearm,
federal officials said. The U.S Customs and Border Protection recently released new details about the March 3
shooting, which killed a 32-year-old Mexican citizen not far from the Otay Mesa Port of Entry border checkpoint.
The article added that according to the federal agency, a border patrol tactical unit was set up that day near a
paved road that runs through the Otay Mountains, a few miles east of the Otay Mesa border crossing, after reports
of armed robberies and assaults targeting migrants trying to cross into the U.S. The border agents, who were in a
concealed position, saw the man threaten a group of migrants by loading a firearm and pointing it at them,
according to the border patrol statement. At that point, a border patrol precision marksman fired one shot at the
armed man, fatally striking him. The article stated that U.S. Customs and Border Protection did not release video
from the shooting but said it was "committed to expeditiously releasing the body-worn camera footage of this
incident as soon as is appropriate to do so and without impacting the ongoing law enforcement investigations." The
San Diego County Sheriff's Department, the FBI, and the Border Patrol's Office of Professional Responsibility are
continuing to investigate, officials said.
Maine Man Charged by FBI Over Online Threats to Kill President Biden, Immigrants
The Portland Press Herald (03/12, Calder) reported that a Maine man who allegedly threatened in online posts to
kill President Biden, other politicians, and immigrants has been arrested by the FBI. The article added
that Benjamin Brown, 45, used YouTube comments over the past several years to make threats toward elected
officials and immigrants and claimed he was stockpiling weapons in preparation for a violent civil war in the U.S.,
according to a criminal complaint and probable cause affidavit filed in court by Jonathan Duquette, an FBI task
force officer. The article mentioned that Kristen Setera, spokeswoman for the FBI Boston Division that covers
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island, said Tuesday in an email that Benjamin Brown was
taken into custody without incident Monday.
Bryan Kohberger Attorney's Appeal of Grand Jury Indictment Denied by Idaho Supreme Court
Fox News (03/12, Wehner, Ruiz) reported that a pretrial appeal filed with the Idaho Supreme Court by Bryan
Kohberger's public defenders was denied Tuesday, though the reasoning behind the denial was not provided.
Kohberger's attorneys claimed prosecutors indicted their client improperly on four counts of first-degree murder
and a single count of burglary, to the grand jury. The article added that while the grand jury was working toward an
indictment, prosecutors said they must reach an indictment if the case reaches the higher legal standard of guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt, instead of the standard of probable cause. The one-page ruling by the Idaho Supreme
Court did not provide any reasoning for their denial of Kohberger's attorney's filed appeal, and the matter was
closed. The article noted that the suspect was attempting to delay proceedings by appealing one of the judge's
individual decisions to a higher court, which was denied. Specifically, Kohberger wanted the Supreme Court to
overturn the judge's decision not to toss the indictment. The article mentioned that it took police more than six
weeks to capture a suspect. They arrested Kohberger at his parent's house in Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains
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after a lengthy investigation that included help from the FBI and police across multiple states. A judge entered not-
guilty pleas on Kohberger's behalf at his arraignment in May. He could face the death penalty if convicted.
FBI Technology Being Used to Help Solve Suburban Chicago Teen's Murder
CBS News (03/12, Gray) reported that new FBI technology could help solve the murder of a suburban teenager. The
14-year-old's mother is still seeking justice six months after her son's death. The article added that Marshawn
Mitchell was shot and killed leaving a football game at Hillcrest High School last year. The FBI hopes someone who
recorded the incident last year will upload the video to their website. Marshawn Mitchell's mother said it's been six
months since her son was murdered, and she's hoping that this technology will bring clarity as to who killed her
son. Mitchell was shot right in front of his school, Hillcrest High School, in September of last year. The article noted
that someone shot and killed the 14-year-old after the school's homecoming football game. Country Club Hills
Police Department started the investigation, but the FBI said the police department asked for their help late last
year. The FBI said the police department reached out to them because they have resources that could identify the
killer or suspects.
'Mastermind' of International Marriage Fraud Ring Gets 22 Months Behind Bars
The Daily Beast (03/12, Rohrlich) reported that the "mastermind" of an international marriage fraud ring that
prosecutors say arranged at least 600 sham weddings has been sentenced to 22 months in federal prison, the DOJ
announced Tuesday. The article added that Marcialito Biol Benitez, a Philippine citizen who goes by "Mars," ran the
illicit business under the guise of a temp agency in offices near the Koreatown section of Los Angeles, according to
court filings. Foreign nationals needing U.S. green cards to live and work in the country paid Benitez between
$20,000 and $35,000 in cash to marry an American, which was handled by a crew of recruiters and facilitators,
prosecutors say. The article noted that Benitez operated the scam from October 2016 through March 2022,
according to prosecutors. Shortly before the feds arrested Benitez in April 2022, an undercover FBI agent was able
to get inside his offices by posing as a food delivery person, the detention memo states. The agent was able to
surreptitiously snap a photo of Benitez meeting with a client and their prospective spouse, it says.
Suspects in California Valentine's Day Homicide Arrested in New York City
CBS News (03/12, Ramos) reported that two suspects in a south Sacramento Valentine's Day homicide were
arrested in New York City, authorities announced Tuesday. Isaiah James and Ayonna Burgos, both 25, are awaiting
transport back to Sacramento to face homicide-related charges for a February 14, 2024, shooting on Florin Road.
The woman who was shot died in an area hospital. The article added that a spokesperson for the Sacramento
Police Department said FBI partners helped locate and arrest James and Burgos.
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CYBER DIVISION
Feds Seize $1.4 Million of Tech Support Scam Proceeds With the Help of Crypto Firm
The Record (03/12, Reddick) reported that the cryptocurrency company Tether seized $1.4 million on behalf of U.S.
law enforcement investigating a tech support scam targeting elderly citizens, the company announced Tuesday —
as it attempts to burnish its reputation amid accusations that its USDT coin is the currency of choice for online
fraudsters. The article noted that much of the funds were then transferred to USDT, a stablecoin that is pegged to
the U.S. Dollar, and then transferred elsewhere by the cyber criminals. According to the affidavit, the FBI identified
wallets holding funds stolen from five victims, which Tether froze at their request. The article mentioned
that Tether and law enforcement have partnered in the past to seize illicit funds. In November, the DOJ
announced the seizure of $9 million in USDT stolen from more than 70 victims in so-called pig-butchering scams.
The same week, Tether announced that it had "voluntarily" frozen USDT worth $225 million "linked to an
international human trafficking syndicate in Southeast Asia responsible for a global 'pig butchering' romance
scam."
Healthcare Hit Hardest by Ransomware Last Year, FBI IC3 Report Shows
Health IT Security (03/12, McKeon) reported that the healthcare sector suffered more ransomware attacks than
any other critical infrastructure sector last year, according to complaint data examined in the FBI's 2023 Internet
Crime Report. The article added the top ransomware variants observed in 2023 attacks
were LockBit and ALPHV/BlackCat, two groups that are known for targeting healthcare. LockBit accounted for 175
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of the critical infrastructure ransomware attacks reported to IC3, and ALPHV/BlackCat was associated with 100
attacks. The article quoted the FBI, which said, "As the cyber threat continues to evolve, the FBI remains
appreciative of those who report cyber incidents to IC3. Information reported to the FBI helps advance our
investigations. Your reporting is critical for our efforts to pursue adversaries, share intelligence with our partners,
and protect your fellow citizens,".
Scammers Raked in $1.3B From Impersonation Scams in 2023, FBI Says
Axios (03/12, Sabin) reported that Americans lost roughly $1.3 billion in 2023 to scammers pretending to be from
the government or tech support, according to new FBI data. The article added that scammers pretend to be
government officials, tech support agents, or customer service representatives to trick people into sending money
or other sensitive information their way. These impersonators typically call with fake stories that would motivate
someone to share their private identifiable details with them. The article noted that U.S. adults' losses from tech
support and government impersonation scams have grown more than sevenfold since 2019, according to the FBI's
annual Internet crime report, released last week.
What Happens When Cyberattacks Do Physical Harm?
CBS News (03/12, Video) posted a video that stated that for months, Director Wray has warned about the risk of
cyberattacks leading to physical disruptions, such as forcing a power plant to overheat and potentially explode. The
video featured Dr. Charles Clancy, chief technology officer at the national security-focused not-for-profit MITRE,
who assessed the threat of these real-world scenarios.
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INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
FBI Seeks Location of New Jersey Man Who Went Missing in Italy in 2019
News 12 (03/12, Trapani) reported that the FBI is asking the public for help locating a New Jersey man who has
been missing overseas since 2019. Liam Biran had been living with his family in Marlboro before he went missing in
Europe. The article added that the FBI says Biran left the United States on April 8, 2019, to visit family in Israel. He
was then traveling to Italy and France. He was supposed to return to the United States on May 16, 2019, but was
not present on his flight back home. According to the article, the FBI says Biran's last known location was on May 9,
2019, when a credit card he was known to use was accessed to purchase a train ticket from Turin, Italy, to the Aosta
Valley, Italy. They say his belongings were found in a remote location in the Aosta Valley. He has not been heard
from since.
'Treaties Don't Work': Wanted Western Fugitives Hide in Wartime Russia
Aljazeera (03/12, Vorobyov) reported that Moscow's cooperation on extraditions with its westward neighbors has
practically ceased since the Ukraine war began. The article noted that Chad Hower is wanted by the FBI, and in
2009, the American software developer was federally indicted for parental kidnapping. According to the article,
Hower lives in Russia, in 2023, he traveled via Cuba to Russia, where he was granted asylum. According to the
article, Hower speculates that he's being pursued by the United States government in an attempt to turn him into
an intelligence asset using his contacts in Russia and elsewhere. The article mentioned that Ukrainian-born
businessman Semion Mogilevich believed to reside in Moscow, is similarly immune to extradition despite once
occupying a place on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list for an alleged high-value stock exchange fraud. Mogilevich has
since been removed from the Top Ten but is still sought by the FBI.
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CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
Trump Says He Will Free Jan. 6 Rioters on First Day if Re-Elected
Fox News (03/12, Dorgan) reported that former President Donald Trump pledged to free individuals imprisoned for
their involvement in the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot, labeling them as "hostages," if he is re-elected. According to
the article, over 1,350 people have been charged across nearly all 50 states for their roles in the event, with at least
560 sentenced, including 335 to periods of incarceration, and nearly 490 charged with assaulting law enforcement.
The article noted that the DOJ continues its investigation, while Trump faces federal and Georgia state charges
related to efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. A federal appeals court also ruled that some Capitol riot
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sentences were improperly increased, highlighting the ongoing legal complexities surrounding the events of
January 6. Additional reporting on the story was provided by The Guardian (03/12, Aratani), Axios (03/12,
Falconer), ABC News (03/12, Kim, lbssa), CBS News (03/12, Rosen, Brito, Rinaldi), USA Today (03/12, Jackson), and
HuffPost (03/12, Shuman).
Capitol Police Defend Actions Surrounding Pipe Bombs Found Jan. 6
The Hill (03/12, Irwin) reported that U.S. Capitol Police defended their actions during a House hearing regarding the
pipe bombs found on January 6, 2021, near the DNC and RNC, amidst the Capitol riot. According to the article,
Assistant Chief of Police Sean Gallagher highlighted the chaotic nature of the day as a reason for the department's
failures in properly responding to the bombs. The hearing, led by Rep. Barry Loudermilk, criticized the previous Jan.
6 Select Committee for not thoroughly investigating the pipe bombs and focused on law enforcement's response
after discovering the devices. The article noted that Gallagher acknowledged the police force's shortcomings,
emphasizing that the lack of officers and the chaos contributed to the failures in handling the situation. Daily Mail
(03/12, Raasch) added that Loudermilk said the FBI has failed to provide adequate detail about the individual who
is still at large. He also said at a hearing Tuesday there are still many missing details about the two pipe bombs that
were planted outside of the Republican and Democrat headquarters in Washington, D.C., the evening before the
January 6 Capitol protest. Further, the FBI, which is still leading the investigation into the plot - and has offered up
to $500,000 to those with information on the bomber - declined to be a part of the hearing, casting a larger
shadow on the current state of the investigation. "The suspect still remains at large," Loudermilk said Tuesday.
"Unfortunately, the FBI has failed to provide substantive updates on the investigation despite numerous requests
from congressional committees. Although it has been more than three years, we still have many unanswered
questions," he continued. "According to the FBI, there are still no suspects as to who planted the devices." RollCall
(03/12, Marquette) and The Independent (03/12, Hawkinson) also reported on the story.
House GOP Report Alleges Jan 6 Committee 'Deleted Records and Hid Evidence'
Fox News (03/12, Colton) reported that House Republicans have accused the Jan. 6 select committee of deleting
records and manipulating evidence to suit a political narrative against former President Donald Trump. According to
the article, Rep. Barry Loudermilk highlighted in an 81-page report that the committee, led by Democrats and
including two Republicans, Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, selectively promoted information and hired Hollywood
producers for their hearings. The report also alleged that the committee failed to investigate security failures
adequately and focused unfairly on Trump and his supporters, with accusations of hiding witness testimonies that
could challenge the committee's findings.
Missouri Woman Sentenced to Jail for Repeated Probation Violations in Capitol Riot Case
The Kansas City Star (03/12, Thomas) reported that a Missouri woman, Mahailya Pryer, who participated in the
January 6, 2021, Capitol riot, was sentenced to 30 days in jail for repeated probation violations, including the use of
methamphetamine and fentanyl. According to the article, U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth revoked her
probation, denying Pryer's motion for early termination based on a previous federal appeals court ruling. The
article noted that Pryer had pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of parading in a Capitol building and was
initially sentenced to 45 days of incarceration followed by 36 months probation. Despite her regret expressed at
sentencing, Pryer faced multiple probation violations, leading to her jail sentence without a subsequent probation
period.
Trump Was Informed of Prohibited Items in Jan. 6 Rally Crowd, His Driver Testified
Politico (03/12, Cheney) reported that on January 6, 2021, Donald Trump's driver testified to congressional
investigators that Trump was informed by his Secret Service detail about prohibited items in the crowd at his rally,
indicating potential security risks. This testimony adds evidence that Trump was aware of the security concerns
before the Capitol riot. According to the article, the driver described an exchange where Trump was told by Robert
Engel, the head of his Secret Service detail, about the crowd carrying prohibited items, which Trump was agitated
about. The testimony, which had been in the Department of Homeland Security's custody, was part of the evidence
considered in the federal prosecution to subvert the election. The article explained that Cassidy Hutchinson's
previous testimony to the select committee, which mentioned Trump's frustration over the crowd size and his
demand to remove magnetometers, was corroborated by the driver's account. Trump has denied Hutchinson's
claims, especially the one about him lunging at the steering wheel, a detail the driver did not recall happening. The
article noted that this testimony provides a detailed view of Trump's insistence on joining his supporters at the
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Capitol and his disregard for the safety concerns expressed by his security detail. USA TODAY (03/12, Bagchi,
Jackson) also reported on the story.
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OTHER FBI NEWS
Fort Leonard Wood Soldiers Visit FBI Office to Learn About the Bureau
U.S. Army (03/12, Buckley) reported that soldiers from the 787th Military Police Battalion spent a day with FBI
agents on March 6 at the Springfield, Missouri, resident agency office. The article quoted Special Agent Trisha
Dewet, FBI recruiter, who said, "We have a shared mission with our military counterparts — to protect the
American people and uphold the Constitution. These relationships are so important for the FBI to hire qualified and
diverse candidates," According to the article, Dewet said discussions revolved around the agent position,
professional staff positions, qualifications, disqualifiers, the hiring process, areas of responsibility, and transfer and
travel opportunities. A total of 13 Soldiers attended the battalion-level leader development visit to the FBI office,
according to 1st Lt. Levi Baldridge, a 787th MP Bn. assistant operations officer.
FBI Albany Hosting Event to Recruit Women Into Law Enforcement
WTEN (ABC-10) (03/12, Mahar) reported that FBI Albany will host its second annual "recruiting women into law
enforcement" event on Tuesday from 5 to 9 p.m. at the Albany Capital Center. 70 law enforcement agencies
representing the Capital Region, Central New York, and Vermont will be attending. The article added that a keynote
and panel discussion will be held from 5 to 6:30 p.m., followed by a tabling session through the end of the night.
Opening remarks will be given by FBI Albany's Special Agent in Charge (SAC) Craig Tremaroli, who will introduce the
FBI's Executive Assistant Director (EAD) of the National Security Branch Larissa Knapp as the keynote speaker and
panel moderator.
SMX Back in the Running for a Spot on $7B FBI Contract
Washington Technology (03/12, Wakeman) reported that SMX is getting a second chance at a $7 billion FBI IT
contract now that the agency has agreed to let the company back into the competition. The company was removed
from the competition for the set of blanket purchase agreements known as the Information Technology Supplies
and Support Services 2nd Generation, or ITSSS-2. The article added that SMX went to the Government
Accountability Office with arguments that the FBI improperly evaluated the company's proposal, applied unstated
evaluation criteria, and conducted an unequal evaluation. The FBI told GAO that it would reevaluate the company's
proposal in light of the protest. Because of the corrective action, GAO has dismissed the protest. Previously, the FBI
said the awards were delayed until late May because of the protests. The article noted that one protest remains
active and that involves Computer World Services Corp., for which GAO has a ruling due date of May 15. The FBI
cannot announce awards while a protest is pending, but it can continue to evaluate proposals.
U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro Pushes for Release of FBI, CIA Files on Latino Civil Rights Leaders
The Houston Chronicle (03/12, Wermund) reported that U.S. intelligence leaders on Tuesday said they would look
into declassifying and releasing materials relating to surveillance of the Latino civil rights movement. U.S. Rep.
Joaquin Castro pressed the heads of the CIA and FBI to "correct the historical record" during a House Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence hearing. According to the article, CIA Director William J. Burns replied: "Yes."
Director Wray said he would "see what we can provide." The article stated that the exchange came after Castro and
U.S. Rep. Jimmy Gomez, a California Democrat, sent a letter to both intelligence leaders pointing to reports that the
CIA and FBI may have been involved in monitoring and collecting information on activists and organizations that
were part of the Latino civil rights movement. They include labor leader Cesar Chavez and the American G.I. Forum,
a civil rights group founded by Mexican American veterans, according to the letter.
In States With Laws Targeting LGBTQ Issues, School Hate Crimes Quadrupled
The Washington Post (03/12, Meckler, Natanson, Harden) reported that school hate crimes targeting LGBTQ+
people have sharply risen in recent years, climbing fastest in states that have passed laws restricting LGBTQ student
rights and education, a Washington Post analysis of FBI data finds. The article noted that in states with restrictive
laws, the number of hate crimes on K-12 campuses has more than quadrupled since the onset of a divisive culture
war that has often centered on the rights of LGBTQ+ youth. At the same time, calls to LGBTQ+ youth crisis hotlines
have exploded, with some advocates drawing a connection between the spike in bullying and hate crimes and the
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political climate. According to the article, overall, there were an average of 108 anti-LGBTQ+ hate crimes at schools
reported to the FBI per year from 2015 to 2019 on both college and K-12 campuses. In 2021 and 2022, the most
recent for which data were available, the average more than doubled to 232.
Opinion: FBI Dallas: Reflecting on a Successful Year
An opinion piece by the Dallas Morning News (03/12, Yarbrough) featured Chad Yarbrough, Special Agent in Charge
of FBI Dallas, who reflected on his first year in charge of the office. According to Yarbrough, over the past 12
months, he has been awed at the amount and complexity of work undertaken by agents, analysts, and professional
staff to protect almost 11.5 million residents across the top half of Texas, to expose foreign adversaries, to provide
assistance to victims and to relentlessly pursue those who seek to steal, whether they want to take retirement nest
eggs or the innocence of a child. Yarbrough stated that countering terrorism remains the FBI's No. 1 priority, and
will not tolerate violence motivated by hate and extremism. Yarbrough mentioned that the public's vigilance and
reporting are key to disrupting individuals with dangerous intentions, and the Dallas office continues its efforts to
build trusted relationships for directing concerns, tips, and threat information. Yarbrough added that the Dallas
division made more than 500 arrests last year, including violent criminals and human traffickers, and identified and
located dozens of child victims. On average, the division disrupted or dismantled a criminal organization almost
every other day and seized illicit drugs almost daily.
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INTERNATIONAL NEWS
China Leads the World in Hypersonic Technology
• Bloomberg: China Leads the World in Hypersonic Technology
Detectives Looking for Missing Students Have Been Found After Disappearing in Mexican State
• Associated Press: Detectives Looking for Missing Students Have Been Found After Disappearing in Mexican
State
Switzerland to Try Syria's Rifaat Al-Assad for War Crimes
• Associated Press: Switzerland to Try Syria's Rifaat Al-Assad for War Crimes
Gaza Airdrops Take Huge Effort and Don't Solve Hunger Crisis
• Wall Street Journal: Gaza Airdrops Take Huge Effort and Don't Solve Hunger Crisis
Palestinians Describe Beatings, Stress Positions, Other Alleged Abuses in Israeli Detention
• Wall Street Journal: Palestinians Describe Beatings, Stress Positions, Other Alleged Abuses in Israeli
Detention
Israel and Hezbollah Exchange Fire as Tensions Flare
• Wall Street Journal: Israel and Hezbollah Exchange Fire as Tensions Flare
Council That Would Rule Haiti Must Navigate Gangs, Other Powerful Forces
• Wall Street Journal: Council That Would Rule Haiti Must Navigate Gangs, Other Powerful Forces
Kenya Hits Pause on Police Deployment to Haiti
• New York Times: Kenya Hits Pause on Police Deployment to Haiti
Top Navalny Aide Attacked With Hammer Outside Home in Lithuania
• New York Times: Top Navalny Aide Attacked With Hammer Outside Home in Lithuania
Zimbabwe, After Expelling U.S. Officials, Accuses Them of Promoting 'Regime Change'
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• New York Times: Zimbabwe, After Expelling U.S. Officials, Accuses Them of Promoting 'Regime Change'
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OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
High-Stakes Rematch Is Set as Biden, Trump Clinch Party Nominations
• Wall Street Journal: High-Stakes Rematch Is Set as Biden, Trump Clinch Party Nominations
• Reuters: Biden, Trump Clinch Nominations, Kicking off Bruising Presidential Rematch
• Washington Post: Biden and Trump Secure Their Parties' Presidential Nominations
• Associated Press: Biden and Trump Clinch Nominations, Setting the Stage for a Grueling General Election
Rematch
• ABC News: Biden and Trump Become 2024's Presumptive Nominees as Rematch Kicks Off
How an Obscure Biden Immigration Policy Became So Controversial
• Wall Street Journal: How an Obscure Biden Immigration Policy Became So Controversial
House Democrats Try to Bypass Speaker Johnson to Force Vote on Ukraine Aid
• Wall Street Journal: House Democrats Try to Bypass Speaker Johnson to Force Vote on Ukraine Aid
U.S. Says F-35 Fighter Jet Program Achieves Full-Rate Production
• Reuters: U.S. Says F-35 Fighter Jet Program Achieves Full-Rate Production
What Is the President's True Role in the Federal Budget Process?
• The National Desk: What Is the President's True Role in the Federal Budget Process?
Judge Approves Trump's $92 Million Bond to Cover Jury Award in E. Jean Carroll Defamation Case
• Associated Press: Judge Approves Trump's $92 Million Bond to Cover Jury Award in E. Jean Carroll
Defamation Case
Texas Tells Biden New Immigrant Processing Facility Is 'An Expensive Band-Aid on a Gunshot Wound'
• Washington Examiner: Texas Tells Biden New Immigrant Processing Facility Is 'An Expensive Band-Aid on a
Gunshot Wound'
White House Says Five American Hostages Now Held by Hamas After Itay Chen Death
• Washington Examiner: White House Says Five American Hostages Now Held by Hamas After Itay Chen Death
Back to Top
BIG PICTURE
New York Times
• Special Counsel Defends Claims on Biden Lapses
• Trump Wooing A Voting Group He Stereotypes
• Russians Seize Advantage in Electronic Warfare
• A 'Red Line' Can Be More Of a Smudge
• Alaska Airlines Plane Was Set For Safety Check Before Blowout
• With Lackluster Growth, Dating Apps Are in Need of a Spark
Wall Street Journal
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• Inflation Edges Up, Hits 3.2%
• Boeing's Woes Put Airlines' Plans In Flux
• Binance Gets Blamed For a Currency Crisis
• TikTok Is Blindsided By Broad Support For Bill to Ban App
• The Couples Who Are Now Embracing the DINK Label
• Chaos Engulfs College Admissions Season
Washington Post
• Biden Secures Needed Delegates
• TV-Smashing Taliban Now Fostering Youtubers
• Death of Ex-worker Another Jolt for Boeing
• House Bill to Reignite Fight Over TikTok
• Hur Stands Ground on Hill
• Haiti Races to Bring in New Leaders
Financial Times
• Trump and Biden Secure Nominations to Set up US Presidential Rematch
• EU and US Find Stop-Gap Funding for Ukraine Weapons
• Shipbuilding: The New Battleground in the US-China Trade War
ABC News
• Boeing Whistleblower Found Dead; 2 Found Dead Following Deadly House Explosion; Russian Missile Strike
Hits Ukraine Skyscraper.
CBS News
• Former Special Counsel Robert Hur Testifies Before Congress About Biden Investigation; Community Throws
Retirement Party for Beloved Mailman.
NBC News
• The Special Counsel Who Investigated President Biden's Handling of Classified Documents Testifies on
Capitol Hill, a House Explosion Kills Two People in Pennsylvania, a Whistleblower Who Raised Safety
Concerns About Boeing Is Found Dead, and More on Tonight's Broadcast.
Fox News
• Hur Report Transcript Shows Biden Claims Ignorance About 100 Times: 'I Don't Know'; Scott Peterson Case
Picked Up by LA Innocence Project; U.S. House to Vote on Bill That Would Require TikTok to Divest From
Bytedance or Face Nationwide Ban; House Gop's Majority Dwindles Even More.
Back to Top
WASHINGTON SCHEDULE
White House
President Biden
• 10:00 AM: The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing
• 1:35 PM: The President departs the White House en route to Joint Base Andrews
• 1:55 PM: The President departs Joint Base Andrews en route to Milwaukee, Wisconsin
• 3:55 PM: The President arrives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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• 5:00 PM: The President delivers remarks on how his investments are rebuilding our communities and
creating good-paying jobs
• 5:50 PM: The President participates in a campaign event
Vice President Harris
• No events scheduled.
US Senate
• A joint hearing with the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs to examine the legislative presentation of The
American Legion and multiple veterans service organizations: JWV TAPS NCHV MOAA NACVSO NCAI VVA
NGAUS and FRA. — 10:00 AM — Host: Veterans' Affairs Committee
US House of Representatives
• Hearing: Hearing Entitled: Bureaucratic Overreach or Consumer Protection? Examining the CFPB's Latest
Action to Restrict Competition in Payments — 9:00 AM — Host: Committee on Financial Services
• Hearing: Too Critical to Fail: Getting Software Right in an Age of Rapid Innovation — 9:00 AM — Host:
Committee on Armed Services
• Hearing: Legislative Presentation of The American Legion Multi VSOs: JWV TAPS NCHV MOAA NACVSO NCAI
VVA NGAUS FRA before the House and Senate VSO Joint Hearing — 10:00 AM — Host: Committee on
Veterans' Affairs
Cabinet Members
• Secretary of State Blinken meets with European Union High Representative Josep Borrell at the Department
of State at 11:15 AM.
• Secretary Blinken participates in a virtual ministerial on humanitarian assistance for Gaza, from the
Department of State at 1:00 PM.
Visitors
• European Union High Representative Josep Borrell meets with Secretary Blinken at the Department of
State.
General Events
• Brookings Institution: Delivering on nuclear deterrence: A conversation with Principal Deputy Administrator
of the NNSA Frank Rose — Wednesday, March 13, 2024. Location: Brookings Institution, 10:00 AM. To
effectively deter aggression and improve collective security in this increasingly complex geopolitical
environment, the United States is committed to ensuring a robust nuclear deterrent while also prioritizing
responsible stewardship of nuclear weapons, reducing the risks of nuclear war, and preparing for the future
of arms control. A safe, secure, and effective nuclear deterrent requires sustaining current capabilities and
modernizing U.S. nuclear forces. And arms control, global nonproliferation, and nuclear risk reduction
require collaboration with our allies and partners and dialogue with potential adversaries. On March 13, the
Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy, and Technology at Brookings will host former Brookings scholar
Frank Rose, principal deputy administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration, to discuss the
steps the U.S. nuclear enterprise is taking to preserve stability and deliver credible deterrence.
• Brookings Institution: The dangers posed by Al and disinformation during elections — Wednesday, March 13,
2024. Location: Brookings Institution, 2:00 PM. The last year has seen an explosion of accessible generative
Al tools, which allow virtually anyone to rapidly and inexpensively create synthetic images, video, audio, and
text. As the presidential election approaches, there are serious concerns about an explosion of
EFTA01655823
disinformation and synthetic content that could impact what is expected to be a very close race. Political
campaigns have already begun implementing generative Al tools to create advertisements, send robocalls
and contact voters, prompting policymakers to propose major legislation and guardrails to protect the
integrity of our elections. On March 13, join the Center for Technology Innovation at Brookings for a
discussion moderated by Senior Fellow Darrell West along with a panel of experts, about the dangers posed
by Al and election disinformation and ways to protect the general public.
. The Heritage Foundation: Seizing the Moment to Defeat DEI — Wednesday, March 13, 2024. Location: The
Heritage Foundation, 9:30 AM. The successful campaign to oust the presidents of Harvard University and the
University of Pennsylvania has made clear that a window of opportunity has opened in the struggle against
DEI and CRT. This window opened when Americans, especially those in the center, watched in horror as
students — indoctrinated into a narrative of oppressor vs. oppressed — threw their support behind the Hamas
terrorists who committed atrocities in Israel on October 7. We must keep this window open. Join us to hear
from experts in national defense, medicine, and education, along with journalists uncovering DEI and CRT's
capture of a wide range of institutions. From medical schools to the military and law schools to corporations,
see how this pernicious ideology has made its way into every facet of American institutions and what can be
done to reverse course. This half-day event will begin with a fireside chat between Congressman Burgess
Owens and Heritage Vice President Eric Teetsel.
. CSIS: Three Futures for Gaza — Wednesday, March 13, 2024. Location: Online Event, 8:30 AM. The CSIS live
studio conversations, 'Gaza: The Human Toll,' are a product of the CSIS Bipartisan Alliance for Global Health
Security, with co-sponsorship of the CSIS Humanitarian Agenda and the CSIS Middle East Program. The show
will convene regularly during this crisis period to capture clearly and accurately the evolving humanitarian
and health situation inside Gaza, understand how the conduct of the conflict is shaping outcomes and future
policy and operational choices, think carefully about what may lie ahead, and hear from key operational
international agencies and NGOs providing humanitarian assistance, as well as other experts with vital
insights. Throughout these conversations, speakers will explore current and proposed U.S. policies. From
8:30-9:OOam, this episode will feature Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), who will discuss current and proposed
U.S. policy options to address the ongoing health and humanitarian crises in Gaza. Senator Van Hollen will be
joined by J. Stephen Morrison, Senior Vice President and Director, CSIS Global Health Policy Center, and
Michelle Strucke, Director, CSIS Humanitarian Agenda and Human Rights Initiative. From 9:00-9:30am, this
episode will feature Francesco Checchi, Professor of Epidemiology and International Health at the London
School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, who will discuss the findings of the recently released report, "Crisis
in Gaza: Scenario-based Health Impact Projections."
• CSIS: Welcome to the U.S., EU Ambassador Neliupgient — Wednesday, March 13, 2024. Location: Online
Event, 10:00 AM. On this episode of Smart Women, Smart Power, host Kathleen McInnis sits down with the
new Ambassador of the European Union to the United States Jovita Neliupgient The pair discusses the war
in Ukraine, including Ukraine's membership to the EU, plus her role in Lithuania facing economic coercion
from China, and much more.
• CSIS: Strategic Japan 2024: Japan and the Global South — Wednesday, March 13, 2024. Location: CSIS, 2:00
PM. Strategic Japan is a CSIS Japan Chair initiative to introduce research from Japanese scholars on regional
and global challenges and the implications for the U.S.-Japan Alliance. This year, the Japan Chair invited two
scholars to explore dimensions of Japan's strategic approach to the Global South, as highlighted in Prime
Minister Kishida's speech during his visit to Washington, D.C. in 2023 and the G7 Hiroshima Summit.
• Carnegie Endowment for International Peace: The Future of American Innovation: A Conversation With Lina
Khan — Wednesday, March 13, 2024. Location: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 12:00 PM. Since
the 1940s, the United States has led the world on innovation and on developing new technologies,
industries, and business models, securing its position as a global superpower. However, in the face of
significant national security challenges and an intensifying global technology race, the U.S. position faces
challenges. How can American companies keep pace with their international counterparts? What is the role
of regulators in preserving competition, fueling critical national security inputs, and facilitating innovation,
particularly in the Al and technology fields? And can the United States maintain its position ahead of its
geopolitical rivals as the reigning economic and technological world power? Join Chair of the Federal Trade
EFTA01655824
Commission Lina M. Khan and Rana Foroohar, associate editor at the Financial Times, for a conversation on
these and other issues.
• Atlantic Council: EnergySource Innovation Stream with Asoba: Enabling energy access in Africa — Wednesday,
March 13, 2024. Location: Online Event, 10:00 AM. Please join the Atlantic Council Global Energy Center for
the next episode of EnergySource Innovation Stream. This series highlights energy innovations with the
potential to reshape the global energy system through discussions with the companies and individuals
working diligently to enable these technologies. On Wednesday, March 13, from 10:00 a.m. — 10:30 a.m. ET,
the Global Energy Center will host Shingai Samudzi, CEO and Founder of Asoba, to discuss the expansion of
clean energy in Africa. William Tobin, Assistant Director at the Atlantic Council Global Energy Center, will
moderate the discussion. For African economies, energy access is essential to enabling economic and social
development. Yet, almost 80 percent of African businesses lack access to stable and affordable energy
sources. Africa represents an energy paradox, a continent rich in renewable energy resources but still
struggling with high levels of energy poverty. Unreliable and aging energy infrastructure alongside limited
financial investment have proved to be substantial roadblocks in expanding energy access across Africa.
Asoba is working to change this. Asoba leverages grid technologies to manage onsite renewable energy
assets through load forecasting, supply and demand management, and dispatch scheduling. Doing so creates
opportunities for more efficient energy supply across the grid and maximizes long term revenue, placing
Asoba at the center of a new era of electricity in Africa.
• Atlantic Council: Baltic bulwark: Prime Minister Evika Silina on Latvia's transatlantic role — Wednesday, March
13, 2024. Location: Atlantic Council, 3:00 PM. On March 13 at 3:00 p.m. ET/8:00 p.m. CET, the Atlantic
Council is hosting an #ACFrontPage conversation with Latvian Prime Minister Evika Silica. The prime minister
will explore Latvia's role in transatlantic affairs and its importance in the Baltic region as a bulwark against
Russia. In the two years since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine began, Latvia has reaffirmed its status as
a steadfast NATO ally and a pivotal player in efforts to safeguard stability, promote collective defense, and
support Kyiv. Additionally, Latvia has surpassed NATO's 2 percent of gross domestic product defense-
spending threshold and currently hosts a NATO forward presence battle group to bolster the Alliance's
eastern flank. With several important milestones to come over the course of this year—including the
twentieth anniversary of Latvia's accession to NATO and the Alliance's seventy-fifth anniversary—Silica joins
the Atlantic Council to outline her government's priorities for the upcoming NATO Summit in Washington
and to discuss how the United States and the Baltic countries can continue to work together to strengthen
their collective security.
Email Public Affairs to subscribe to the Daily News Briefing. Mobile version and archive available here.
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