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Category: Justice

  • MIL-OSI Australia: All rise and explore the law and its role in our community this Law Week

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    As part of ACT Government’s ‘One Government, One Voice’ program, we are transitioning this website across to our . You can access everything you need through this website while it’s happening.

    Released 16/05/2025

    Canberrans are being called upon to deepen their knowledge of the law as the ACT prepares for its annual Law Week.

    Running 16 to 23 May, the week includes a range of events to promote public understanding of the law and its role in society. The theme for 2025 is “exploring law, engaging communities, inspiring change”.

    Attorney-General Tara Cheyne said with the government in the process of progressing important reforms, Law Week provides a timely opportunity for the community to learn more about the justice system and how it works.

    “The law intersects with almost every aspect of our lives, although many of us don’t think about it until it affects us personally. Law Week is a chance for us to reflect on our unique legal system and acknowledge its important role in our society,” the Attorney-General said.

    “Australia’s legal system is one of the key elements that ensure we live in a free and fair society that finely balances individual rights and community safety.

    “The ACT Government is currently consulting on important bail reforms which would seek to improve the framework within which judicial officers need to make often complex decisions. To find out more or provide input visit www.yoursayconversations.act.gov.au/bail-reform.

    “Another key initiative is the proposed introduction of an indicative sentencing framework, which has the potential to streamline criminal court proceedings, reduce uncertainty for defendants and victims, and allow for faster access to support services.

    Law Week events in Canberra are being delivered by the ACT Law Society and its partners. This year they are also raising funds for Roundabout Canberra.

    In addition to fundraising events there are also a number of free educational events, including a series of events for high school and college students at the ACT Courts on Friday 23 May, including:

    • Mock jury empanelment: An interactive role play highlighting the jury process and guided by Sheriff’s Officers.
    • Mock bail hearing:  You be the judge, a simulated court hearing delivered in an engaging, educational format.
    • Local justice organisations: An exhibit of organisations that work in the justice sector, with visits from Court Support Canines.
    • Educational court tours: Showing students the ACT Courts’ history and what happens inside a courtroom.

    For more information on Law Week events, visit: https://actlawsociety.asn.au/about/law-week.

    Quotes attributable to Benjamin Wickham, CEO at ACT Courts and Tribunals:

    “This is our third annual open day as part of Law Week.  As well as the mock bail hearing, our Sheriffs will guide students through the jury empanelment process, and we will have a cohort of local justice agencies onsite to give visitors information about the vital services they provide to the community.

    “The aim of this open day is to give people a view behind the scenes of the courts. Coming before a judge or a magistrate can be extremely stressful, and the open day gives people an opportunity to see how the justice system works and hopefully take away some of the fear and anxiety that people have about what happens here.”

    – Statement ends –

    Tara Cheyne, MLA | Media Releases

    «ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

    MIL OSI News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: New inclusive scarves bring comfort and pride to breast screening in the ACT

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    As part of ACT Government’s ‘One Government, One Voice’ program, we are transitioning this website across to our . You can access everything you need through this website while it’s happening.

    Released 16/05/2025

    People from the LGBTIQA+ community who attend a breast screening appointment in the ACT will receive a rainbow scarf to foster inclusivity and encourage health screenings.

    BreastScreen ACT has today launched the Inclusive Rainbow Threads Project ahead of the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, Intersexism, and Transphobia.

    In collaboration with local artist LaToya Kennedy of Kalari Art, BreastScreen ACT has created vibrant rainbow scarves to encourage people from the LGBTIQA+ community to invest in their health and book in for a breast screen.

    Minister for Health Rachel Stephen-Smith emphasised the importance of creating a safe and welcoming environment for all individuals accessing breast screening services in the ACT.

    “The Inclusive Rainbow Threads Project is a positive step towards ensuring that breast and chest screenings are accessible and inclusive for everyone, regardless of gender identity or sexual orientation,” Minister Stephen-Smith said.

    “The rainbow scarves will be given to individuals who identify as part of the LGBTIQA+ community and attend their breast screening appointment.

    “By fostering an environment of support and respect, we aim to encourage regular screenings and promote the health and wellbeing of the LGBTIQA+ community in the ACT.”

    The project is supported by BreastScreen ACT’s community of donors and supporters, Luton Properties, the ACT Government LGBTQIA+ and Social Inclusion Strategy Team, and the Canberra Hospital Foundation.

    Through Canberra Hospital Foundation’s Pay It Forward initiative, members of the community can contribute by purchasing a scarf where a portion of the funds will pay it forward for someone in the LGBTQIA+ community who attends a screening.

    This project builds on the installation of three new mammography machines at ACT community health centres in 2022-23.

    Free mammograms are available to eligible Canberrans over the age of 40 years. People aged 50 to 74 years are actively encouraged to have mammograms every two years. It only takes about 20 minutes and no referral is needed.

    More information on BreastScreen ACT can be found here: www.canberrahealthservices.act.gov.au/services-and-clinics/services/breastscreen-act.

    Quotes attributable to Jodie Kirkness, BreastScreen ACT Quality and Promotions Manager:

    “It’s important to make people feel safe and included when they come in for a breast screen. Health care should be accessible, inclusive and supportive for everyone – regardless of gender identity or sexual orientation.

    “Research shows that people within this group experience increased discrimination, affecting access to health services and ultimately reducing the benefits of early detection.”

    Quotes attributable to LaToya Kennedy of Kalari Art:

    “As a proud Indigenous lesbian, I draw inspiration from my ancestors who have walked this land before us and who have managed and maintained this land for tens-of-thousands of years; and from my Indigenous and LGBTQIA+ communities who have taught me to always be strong and proud of who I am and where I come from.

    “I also get inspiration from my surroundings, recreating elements of Country and telling stories through symbolic representation.”

    “The design shows multiple aspects of traditional elements, such as meeting places, connection pathways, people, symbols that represent the LGBTQIA+ community, footprints, and animal tracks.”

    “The design also demonstrates connections and unique relationships that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have with the country, land and the LGBTQIA+ community.”

    – Statement ends –

    Rachel Stephen-Smith, MLA | Media Releases

    «ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

    MIL OSI News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Green your verge with our free plant giveaway

    Source: South Australia Police

    Local verges and gardens will soon be greener, with our popular Wannagrow plant giveaway returning next month.

    Wanneroo Deputy Mayor James Rowe said this year’s giveaway would see 8,000 free verge-friendly plants handed out to residents, to support biodiversity and urban greening across the City.

    “There will be volunteers from the Wildflower Society of WA on hand to provide expert advice and help distribute a selection of waterwise native plants for your garden,” he said.

    “Our Wannagrow program is just one of the ways we are working to create a more liveable, waterwise City for all residents.”

    City of Wanneroo residents are eligible for 10 plants each, via a convenient drive-through collection. Pre-registration is essential and proof of residency will be required.

    This initiative is proudly co-funded by Water Corporation’s Waterwise Greening Scheme.

    Event details:

    When: 9am to 2pm, Saturday 15 June 2025

    Where: Kingsway Regional Sporting Complex, Madeley

    RSVP: Registrations are essential. Free tickets will be released in two stages:

    MIL OSI News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Officer stops thieves in their tracks

    Source: New Zealand Police

    A group of offenders were no match for one Sergeant during a foot pursuit in Manukau.

    In the process, thousands of dollars in products that had just been stolen was recovered.

    Around 4.30pm on Wednesday, the on-duty Sergeant was conducting prevention patrols in the Manukau Westfield carpark, when a group of young people were seen running from the mall carrying handfuls of clothing.

    “The officer saw the youths running and being pursued by mall security and a few other people,” Counties Manukau Area Prevention Manager, Inspector Warrick Adkin says.

    “He quickly parked his patrol car and started to give chase as well, following the alleged offenders onto Ronwood Ave.”

    Once there the group took the opportunity to board a stationary bus in the hopes of making a swift exit, however the pursuing officer was only one step away.

    “Our Sergeant has boarded the bus right after them and managed to herd eight or so into the back, preventing their escape,” Inspector Adkin explains.

    The officer kept all the alleged offenders contained until back up arrived and could give him a helping hand.

    Inspector Adkin says quick thinking and an impressive running pace, resulted in the recovery of over $2500 worth of clothing, and around $300 worth of cosmetics from varying retailers.

    The young people, all aged between 10 and 15 years, were all apprehended and the loot was returned to the stores.

    All have been referred to Youth Aid.

    ENDS.

    Amanda Wieneke/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Tillis Honors North Carolina Law Enforcement Officers During National Police Week

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for North Carolina Thom Tillis
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – In recognition of National Police Week, Senator Thom Tillis delivered remarks on the Senate floor in honor of North Carolina law enforcement officers who made the ultimate sacrifice in the last year. He encouraged his Senate colleagues to help pass the Protect and Serve Act, legislation introduced by Senator Tillis that would give federal prosecutors more tools to go after those who deliberately target law enforcement officers by making it a federal crime to knowingly cause, or attempt to cause, bodily injury to a law enforcement officer.

    Watch Senator Tillis’ full remarks HERE.
    Tillis on honoring fallen North Carolina Law Enforcement Officers during National Police Week:
    “Mr. President, I rise during Police Week to honor the brave men and women in North Carolina and across the nation who serve in law enforcement. Thousands of officers and their families come to our nation’s capital every year to pay tribute to those who made the ultimate sacrifice to protect our communities. Each name added to the memorial wall represents a story of courage, selflessness, and sacrifice. Unfortunately, North Carolinians know all too well about that kind of sacrifice.” 
    Tillis on the Protect and Serve Act:
    “While we can’t stop natural disasters or accidents, lawmakers can play a role in helping reduce the intentional targeting of law enforcement. That’s why I continue to push for the passage of the Protect and Serve Act. This is legislation that I introduced that makes it a federal crime to intentionally harm or attempt to harm a law enforcement officer. It also gives prosecutors new tools to penalize criminals who target law enforcement. Officers go to work every day prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice for their communities, and they need our support more now than ever.” 
    Tillis thanks the men and women in law enforcement:
    “To every officer serving today, thank you for your courage. You’ve earned my unending gratitude. By supporting this bill, members of the U.S. Senate can demonstrate their enduring gratitude to law enforcement. By not supporting it, I don’t know what that says, but I know it’s something that, in North Carolina and among law enforcement agencies, it’s not good. To the families of the fallen, your loss is shared by a grateful nation. We will never forget your loved ones’ service nor their sacrifice. God bless them. God bless law enforcement, and may God bless the United States of America.” 
     

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Allen Backs Pro-Law Enforcement Bills During National Police Week

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Rick Allen (R-GA-12)

    This week, in honor of National Police Week, the U.S. House of Representatives passed three pieces of legislation to express support for law enforcement officers and agencies nationwide. After voting in support of each measure, Congressman Rick W. Allen (GA-12) issued the following statement:

    “National Police Week serves as a powerful reminder of the sacrifices made by our law enforcement officers and the vital role they play in protecting our communities, our families, and our loved ones. While they face increasing challenges and threats to their safety, as the recent tragedy in Columbia County has shown us, it is more important now than ever to stand with our men and women in blue. I was proud to help pass this week’s legislation and will continue to unapologetically support those who carry the badge in the 12th District and across the nation.”

    The pro-law enforcement bills passed this week include:

    H.R. 2240, the Improving Law Enforcement Officer Safety and Wellness Through Data Act of 2025: 

    • Requires the Attorney General to assemble reports on violence against law enforcement officers and the effectiveness of programs meant to provide law enforcement with wellness resources and protective equipment so we may comprehensively enhance the safety of police officers.

    H.R. 2243, the LEOSA Reform Act: 

    • Broadens the ability of qualified active and retired law enforcement officers to carry concealed firearms in areas such as national parks, federal facilities open to the public, and state, local, or private property open to the public.

    H.R. 2255, the Federal Law Enforcement Officer Service Weapon Purchase Act: 

    • Directs the General Services Administration to allow current and retired federal law enforcement officers to buy their retired service weapons at salvage value.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: UPDATE: Arrest – Serious Assault – Alice Springs

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    The Northern Territory Police Force have arrested a man in relation to the serious assault that occurred in Alice Springs yesterday afternoon.

    Around 12am, detectives attended a residence on Gap Road and arrested the 22-year-old man.

    He currently remains in custody.

    The victim remains in hospital receiving treatment and a crime scene remains open in on Gregory Terrace, between Todd Street and Hartley Street, with members of the public advised to avoid the area.

    Initial enquiries indicate both the offender and victim were known to each other and not Alice Springs residents.

    Investigations into the assault and the large altercation remain ongoing.

    MIL OSI News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: DOC reopens lower Hooker Valley Track

    Source: Police investigating after shots fired at Hastings house

    Date:  16 May 2025

    “We know how much this iconic walk is valued and how much people love to visit and walk it, so we’ve worked hard to keep the lower part of the track open,” says Aoraki Mount Cook Operations Manager Sally Jones.

    “There is an elevated viewing site looking over Mueller Lake and visitors can still walk up the stunning Hooker Valley past the first suspension bridge which is about an hour’s return from the carpark at White Horse Hill.

    “We will have to keep the upper part of the track closed while the construction takes place as there are helicopters carrying big loads flying overhead. It’s a worksite and keeping people safe is our number one priority.”

    Sally Jones says the well-known track to Kea Point is also still open and visitors can enjoy the iconic views of Aoraki and other mountains close by.

    “Kea Point is not as popular, but the views are just as spectacular as the Hooker Valley. For those who with the skills and fitness seeking a more challenging walk, there is also the trek up to Sealy Tarn, to Mueller Hut and the walk up to the Tasman blue lakes.”

    Work is underway to get the Hooker Valley Track fully open. Once built, a huge new suspension bridge will span 189 metres across the river. It will replace an older bridge which had to be closed last month due to riverbank erosion near the bridge supports.

    DOC contractors have been on site to block off access to the old bridge and to keep visitors away from what is now a construction site and must be treated as such.

    Construction work will continue for the rest of this year, and it’s hoped the new bridge will be open by next Autumn.

    “It’s a huge and challenging project and will be a tourist attraction in its own right,” says Sally Jones.

    The cables that will be flown in are massive and the whole thing will be spectacular to watch. We can’t wait until it’s open.”

    Incredible landscapes, nature, and cultural heritage make Aoraki Mount Cook one of the top two most popular national parks in Aotearoa (alongside Fiordland). It attracts over a million visitors a year and is on the itineraries of about 21% of international visitors.

    Map of the current closures on the Hooker Valley Track

    Contact

    For media enquiries contact:

    Email: media@doc.govt.nz

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Eyes in the sky assist in locating missing man

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Police wasted no time taking to the sky following a concerning call from a member of the public whose father suffering from dementia had gone missing.

    Just before 1am, Police were informed of man in his 80s with dementia who had gone missing in the Ōrere Point area.

    Counties Manukau South Area Prevention Manager, Inspector Matt Hoyes says the man hadn’t been seen for several hours and Police had several concerns for his wellbeing.

    “The information we received indicated several risk factors, including his limited mobility and the fact he was unfamiliar with the surrounding area, which backs onto Ōrere Point Beach.

    “Given the remote location, the Police Eagle helicopter was promptly deployed to assist in the search.

    “Eagle quickly got up and was very quickly able to locate the missing man in the nearby bush area.”

    Inspector Hoyes says tactical flight officers aboard Eagle guided the informant to his father’s location just prior to ground staff arriving.

    “Eagle’s prompt response to this incident was no doubt instrumental in ensuring this man was located swiftly and safely.

    “This was a great example of multiple Police resources working together for the greater good, it’s not always about apprehending offenders, a huge part of our role is looking out for one another.”

    ENDS.

    Holly McKay/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Murkowski to EPA: “Let me help you”

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Alaska Lisa Murkowski
    05.15.25
    Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski, Chair of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, hosted the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in subcommittee to discuss the agency’s budget request. The Senator and Administrator Lee Zeldin discussed how the subcommittee can best serve the agency’s mission of providing clean air, water, and land for all Americans, while the Administrator committed to fostering a better working relationship with the subcommittee and Senator Murkowski’s office.
    Chair Murkowski discussed a number of issues important to Alaska that she is looking forward to collaborating with the EPA on, including cleaning up PFAS contaminated lands, ensuring clarity for Alaskans on frozen or paused EPA grants, addressing the backlog of Congressionally Directed Spending (CDS) projects, and investing in cleaning up lands conveyed to Alaska Natives that were contaminated by the federal government.
    Click here to watch the Senator’s full remarks and questions.
    The full transcript of Senator Murkowski’s opening remarks, questions and exchanges with Administrator Zeldin, and the Senator’s closing remarks can be read below.
    TRANSCRIPT
    Opening remarks
    Murkowski: Good morning, the Committee will come to order. I’d like to welcome Administrator Zeldin to the committee here this morning. I think it is important that as we begin our budget hearings, we begin the oversight through the Interior Appropriations Subcommittee with the EPA, an area of interest, I think, for all of us, as we think about how we ensure that Americans from Alaska to Oregon, to New York to all the places in between, have the benefits of clean air, clean water for all of us.
    So, thank you, Administrator, for being here to discuss the Fiscal Year 2026 budget request. We recognize that what we have seen is “skinny,” as we refer to it around here. Each year, the subcommittee holds a hearing to examine the EPA budget requests. Some years, the budget is the focus of the hearing, and others, it’s agency actions that draw the majority of the questions. I think it’s probably safe to assume that this year it’s going to be a mixture of both of these. And again, we’ve just seen the “skinny” outline of Fiscal Year 2026, we have yet to see the full details of the President’s budget request, but I have to say at the outset: looking at some of these proposed cuts, I’m looking at them and questioning whether they are serious cuts. I find many of them problematic. I’m just going to be open and honest with my words here this morning and we will have good dialogue, constructive dialogue, in this committee.
    So again, while we’re waiting for additional details, I want to spend my time this morning talking about the vision for the EPA and Administrator, how you plan to use your position to continue to better provide clean air, water and land for Americans from Alaska to Florida, from California to Maine, and how a budget like the one that you propose could support that mission.
    Under the Biden administration, I had some very serious concerns about the regulatory overreach of the agency. I expressed them often. I also shared the concerns that I felt were overzealous enforcement actions coming out of the agency that went contrary to the needs of Alaskans. We were able to figure out how to find common ground in certain areas to make progress, and some things that were certainly good for Alaska. I mentioned to you contaminated lands, residential wood stove testing and certification. We still have a long, long ways to go on PM, 2.5, I think we know that. PM 2.5 and 301 (h) waivers… We’ve got work to do. I think we know that.
    So now we’re in a in a new administration, new administrator and perhaps a different direction here. I do appreciate many of the actions and the initiatives that we have had a chance to discuss. (I) certainly support the willingness to work with the Army Corps of Engineers to review the WOTUS rule, your reconsideration of Clean Power Plan 2.0, the vehicle emissions rules, and then, of course, a renewed focus on permitting, something I would think that all of us can come together on.
    But my concern this morning, and what you will hear from me, and I think many others, is the approach that’s been taken with regards to freezing funds, canceling grants, and then the reorganization of the agency. I’m looking at it through the not only through the lens of Alaskans, but really all Americans who, regardless of how you feel about the EPA, we benefit from its data driven decision-making, the remediation efforts and the mission to protect human health and environment. And I respect, I give a lot of leeway for an incoming administration’s prerogative to implement changes in support of the policies and priorities, but it also has to be done with clear articulation of the of the goals against which such changes will be measured.
    And so, it’s problematic when as a committee we’re asking questions, we don’t receive basic data that would be helpful, would be good guidance for us. And so, when we see implementation of significant changes without working or seriously communicating with us, your partners in Congress, it just makes it harder for us to do the job of supporting your mission. We are on the same side here, and so we want to work with you in so many of these areas.
    I think we all can agree that there are inefficiencies and redundancies to be found throughout the federal government, some of EPA programs we know are overly burdensome. And again, I applaud the administration for seeking to find ways to help ordinary Americans cut through red tape and make programs easier to access. But the seemingly indiscriminate freezing of EPA funding, regardless of source, has caused some significant anxiety from the folks that I’m talking to in Alaska. One example is the Community Change Grants in my state, we’ve received $150 million from this program. It’s communities like the little village of Kipnuk, it’s the Native village of Kotzebue. Took a lot of work to get to the place where they were able to secure the funding, and they’ve had their grants canceled by the agency without any explanation, and so this is where some of the anxiety comes, is just not knowing why.
    It’s not just in Alaska. I think members on both sides of the dais can, and probably will, talk about the benefits of the grants to their states and their communities. You’ve also proposed massive reorganizations of EPA to include the elimination of the Office of Atmospheric Programs and the Office of Research and Development. It is true that agencies funded by our bill will have the flexibility to reprogram and reorganize, and we provide that flexibility because we know – we get it. There can be urgent and exigent circumstances that warrant such actions. However, agencies must comply with the requirements and provide the committees with the requisite information, whether it’s budgetary and staffing implications, but also the rationale for the actions to include why these actions are so urgent. And so far, EPA has not adhered to our reprogramming guidelines and has been largely unresponsive to the questions. So, I would certainly expect timely and transparent responses and information. I would expect EPA to abide by the parameters that are outlined in our reprogramming guidelines. And I think, as a former member of Congress, you get it. You’ve been on the frustration end of things as well. So again, ways that we can be working together.
    Now, turning our attention to the FY 26 budget proposal. In Alaska, we’ve seen on the ground examples of really good things being done with some of the programs that your budget has substantially reduced or proposed to eliminate. Example: the proposed reduction of the State Revolving Fund, reducing it from $2.8 billion down to $305 million. This is an 88% reduction. This was one of the ones when I mention unserious proposal. This is the one that I’m looking at, because it clearly is one of the most essential programs that the agency administers. And you mentioned as part of your justification for cutting this program that the account has been heavily earmarked, and this is true. The 66 members of the Senate, including 17 Republicans, making it our most bipartisan account, who requested congressionally directed spending for the SRF accounts did so in connection with the states to ensure the funding was going to critical clean water and drinking water projects. Now I would also note that in FY 25, Congress voted for, and the President signed into law, a full year CR that keeps the SRF fully funded, rather than reducing it by the amount of the CDS is.
    So, I’m going to close my comments here with, I don’t know if it’s a note of sympathy or just an acknowledgement, because I get it. You are, I think, 106 days since you were confirmed and sworn in as EPA Administrator. And for an agency as key and as vital as yours, that’s really a short time to get everything up and running, from enacting the administration’s priorities to establishing a clear working relationship with us here in Congress. We know that you’re still getting your team in place, because we’re trying to move them through our process here, and it is slow, and you need those folks. You need the members of your team. So, I’m giving you the benefit of the doubt here. There’s plenty of time for us to figure out what’s working what’s not, establish open lines of communication between our teams that will mutually benefit your mission and all those that we work for. So, I’m eager to start on that. I thank you for your testimony today, your willingness to answer our questions and just the opportunity to be working with you. And with that, I turn to ranking member Merkley for his comments.
    First line of questions from Murkowski
    Murkowski: I will begin with my first five minutes, and again, appreciate the opportunity that you and I have had to discuss some of the particular issues. I’d like to ensure that we continue that very direct engagement, not only between us, but also with our staffs. We’ve had a conversation about transparency, partnership and responsiveness, and again, I think you come to this position really from a good place, because you’ve sat in in our seats here, so to speak. When you’ve asked questions of an agency and you get frustrated because you’re not able to get what you’re seeking.
    So, there is a lot going on within the agency, as you have outlined, and as I suppose the ranking member and I have outlined. But we need to be more informed, rather than getting updates by way of tweets or stories for them from the media. The agency has issued reorganization notifications, but we’re not getting the full picture or the answers to some of the questions that we have asked. So, my direct question to you this morning is just a renewed commitment that the promise of transparency, partnership and responsiveness is there, that we’re going to be able to have meetings between your senior teams and our folks on the Appropriations side, so that we can help you. Let me help you type of an approach, and that’s what I’m seeking from you this morning, Mr. Administrator.
    Zeldin: Absolutely, Madam Chair, and you uniquely amongst 535 members of Congress have a “Batphone” into my office, which I would encourage you to use at any time. We’ve spoken since my confirmation, and when we meet, you often have a very long list of priorities for Alaska, that you’re fighting for, that you’re passionate about. And to make sure that we’re working through that list at every opportunity is something that will be a priority for our team as long as I am here as administrator, and I would encourage you to reach out whenever you would like, and I’d be available to work through whatever is at the top of your list that day.
    Murkowski: Very good. Very good. Let me ask about the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund. I mentioned in my opening, these are probably the areas where on this committee we have more bipartisan support for a program, and we’re looking at a budget that effectively eliminates the one thing that we’re all in agreement on. So, I’d ask you to share with me and the others on the committee why the agency would move away from such a critical on-the-ground program when we’re talking about access to clean water?
    Zeldin: Madam Chair, as you pointed out in your opening remarks, and as you referenced from the skinny budget that was released that we’re here to talk about today, there has been a bleeding out of funds deliberately through decisions made by Congress to earmark. I understand that when I came into this position, I inherited a lot of earmarks that many of you have fought for, and I want to be able to continue to work with each of you and your staffs. In some cases, we need to get the recipients to submit paperwork where they’re on the receiving end of big earmarks, so that we can work through this backlog as quickly as we can. It would be helpful to have a conversation about the SRF and the use of earmarks, and how that has been reducing the funding through the years.
    As you all know, there’s a difference when these skinny budgets come out, whether or not something is funded at $0, or it’s funded at $1. Now that might not seem like much to the American public in understanding how these conversations go in Congress. The SRF is not zeroed out in the skinny budget – In fact, it has hundreds of millions of dollars there in it. So, as we go forward with this process, I look forward to more conversations about the SRF, and I’m sure members of the House and the Senate will be having conversations amongst yourselves as to what you believe to be the appropriate funding level for SRF, as well as the future of the program, and whether or not earmarks will continue to be used to reduce that balance. That’s obviously a decision that Congress has a very important role to play.
    Murkowski: Well we do, and we can have a separate discussion about earmarks. I think we both know that earmarks don’t contribute to the top line number you are discussing here. A concern that I have raised with you, that there has been, over the years, Congressionally Directed Spending, earmarks, that have been moved through the process, authorized and appropriated to, and still not spent down. So, my time has expired. Now know that on this next round, I’m going to ask for a little more discussion about that. But I do think that given the significance of the Clean Water State Revolving Fund and the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund by so many of us… let’s have a broader discussion about how we move forward with what I would think most of us recognize has got to be a priority within the EPA.
    Second line of questions from Murkowski
    Murkowski: Administrator, I had asked you, we had had a discussion about the Congressionally Directed Spending projects. You have indicated that, indeed, we’ve got a backlog here that we need to address. My understanding is that since fiscal year 2022, Congress had directed 2,264 CDs projects at the EPA – only 705 have received the funding. So, I think both of us would agree, you know, we’ve got an issue here. There’s a problem. The FY 25 CR, of course, did not include the CDS projects. So, I’m looking at that and saying, all right, the agency has the balance of the fiscal year to work on catching up from this backlog of the CDSs. Can you just give me a little bit of your understanding in terms of how you’ve directed your team to expeditiously get these projects out the door in a more timely manner?
    Zeldin: I appreciate the question, Madam Chair. The backlog goes back years. I’ve directed my team to both work with the members of Congress who represent those areas, the members of Congress who requested those earmarks to get assistance in the case where the recipient has not been responsive, and simultaneously, to try to engage as much as possible directly with the recipient, to try to get the recipient to submit their paperwork. We want to completely get through the entire backlog that we inherited as quickly as possible.
    Murkowski: Can we help you with that?
    Zeldin: Yes.
    Murkowski: I’m working with my constituents right now as we’re moving forward in this year’s appropriations and getting requests for CDSs. So, can you perhaps either let me know who it is on your team that we need to be communicating directly to if there are snags on your end, or perhaps, again, you’re just not able to get in touch with the applicant?
    Zeldin: 100%. As you well know, the EPA is broken down into all sorts of different program offices.
    Murkowski: Right.
    Zeldin: And the it might not be just one person for all grants. It might depend on whether the backlog might… we might be talking about a backlog inside of the Office of Water, where they need assistance from the members of Congress, or maybe it’s another office. Maybe it’s the Office of Air and Radiation. We would look forward to an opportunity to work with you and your team, and all members of Congress, on both sides of the aisle as much as possible, to eliminate the backlog that we inherited.
    Murkowski: Good, good. Let’s do that. I think that’s a good plan.
    Many members here have asked about different grants and programs, the pauses, the freezes. It’s been particularly frustrating in Alaska, when we hear there’s been a hold up in terms of the grant award. We’ve got just a limited construction season. It’s just hard. Even if not choked by ice, you might have a barge that comes up with your materials for a project, maybe once, maybe twice a season, and so it can push a project back, not just months, but by another season – another year, perhaps multiple years. It’s been hard to provide some clarity to our communities on which grants are going to be awarded, which are just going through the review process that you shared with us, which grants have been terminated.
    So, I’d ask if your folks could provide a list of what’s actually been paused for review versus what has been terminated. I think we’ve heard, for instance, on the EJ (Environmental Justice) grants, that one has been perhaps more clear, but there are a lot in between. And I think it would help our communities if there was more certainty as to what has actually been terminated versus what is still in the pipeline for review. So, I’d ask for your help on that.
    Zeldin: Absolutely, Madam Chair, and we will continue to be distributing funding appropriated by Congress as we go through the rest of the fiscal year that will include funds for your great, great state, and we look forward to working with you on the process. As you know, when the President first came in, there was an administration-wide pause that was lifted. The pause that was then instituted for EPA was more specific to some of the Inflation Reduction Act programs. There was a Clean School Bus program concern that was that was raised early in the administration, when Lion Electric (Company) and their bankruptcy issue caused some questions to be asked to make sure that the concerns with Lion Electric (Company) were it was just specific to Lion Electric (Company). And as it relates to the grants that were that were canceled, that’s something that if you have any questions about what was included in that we’re happy to answer any individual questions.
    Murkowski: Good, okay, we’ll work with you on that list.
    Third line of questions from Murkowski
    Murkowski: The operating plan for FY25 we received. It’s very much in line with the previous year’s funding level for each line item. There’s a lot of changes that that have been discussed, but it sounds like you are committing to spending the funds as delineated in the agency’s spend plans. And I guess my ask to you is, if that’s not going to be the case, that the subcommittee receive a reprogramming request so that we basically follow the process if, in fact, we’re not doing the agency is not doing this spend out as we have anticipated, as these small communities understand them.
    I just have two very quick follow ups. One is very easy for you, because we’ve discussed it at length, but it is a significant issue in my state when it comes to contaminated lands. The history that I have shared with you of Alaska Natives receiving their settlement of lands, being conveyed by the federal government. And basically, they were conveyed tainted lands, lands that were contaminated by various actions of federal agencies, whether it’s the land managers, or the Department of Defense. And so, we have made some good progress with EPA. And believe me, this is not EPA’s is fault or liability for the contamination. It’s the federal governments. But what we have learned is that the EPA is uniquely qualified to help us solve this issue. Over the past couple years, there’s been roughly $20 million in funding that has been directed to contaminated lands, and the agencies have been doing some really good work. I just need your commitment that we’re going to continue with this. $20 million, unfortunately, doesn’t even get the first project cleanup. We know that that these are expensive, but it is an obligation. It is a liability of our government, and we owe it, whether it’s to Alaska Natives as conveyance of their settlement, or to others. And I know that when we’re talking (EPA) Superfunds, Brownfields, contaminated lands, we just have so much work to do here. So, know that you got cooperation on my level here.
    Zeldin: Yes, Madam Chairwoman, I look forward to visiting over the course of the next couple of weeks in Alaska. Might be able to have the opportunity to hear about, see about, see this firsthand, and I will, with regards to all appropriations, make sure that we are fulfilling our obligations under the law. So, if Congress appropriates the funds, we’ll make sure that it’s spent.
    Murkowski: Very good.
    PFAS is something that we talk a lot about in Interior Appropriations Subcommittee. Last month, you announced that EPA will “tackle PFAS from all of EPA’s program officers, advancing research and testing, stopping PFAS from getting into drinking water systems, holding polluters accountable, and providing certainty for passive receivers. You said this was just the beginning of the work that EPA is going to do to tackle PFAS, which I certainly appreciate, and I know most everyone up here does.
    Can you tell me whether the operating plan and the skinny budget requests, whether they actually reflect this kind of full forward push on PFAS, and whether it includes the $10 billion that the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding provided to take on PFAS contamination. I’m looking at this skinny budget, and I’m saying, good for you, let’s go on PFAS. But I’m worried about making sure that we’re actually budgeting to do so, and I’m also worried about whether or not with the RIFs that we have seen to date, as well as what is anticipated about perhaps an additional fork in the road, whether we’re going to be able to do the job. So again, this is something where you’re going to have good support from people in this committee for the initiative. But do you have the budget, and do you have the people?
    Zeldin: Senator, we’re actually adding people into this effort inside of the Office of Water. As you noted, this spans multiple program offices at EPA. A lot of the PFAS work is done inside of the Office of Water. The reorganization announcement that we made a couple weeks ago includes boosting that effort inside of the Office of Water. The press release from April 28 that you referenced included a lot of different actions that we plan on taking, and everything that the agency has announced is already factored into the skinny budget that is before the committee today.
    Murkowski: And so, let me just ask more directly, whether or not you’re concerned that the RIFs or the deferred resignation is going to impact your ability to execute, whether it’s on the PFAS side or contaminated lands, or any number of issues that you’ve heard here from members.
    Zeldin: No, Madam Chair. This is a very important priority of ours at EPA. When I was in Congress, I was a member of the PFAS Task Force. I had voted for the PFAS action act, when I was a member of the House. I represented the district that had all sorts of different PFAS contamination issues. This is something that, in many respects, started during President Trump’s first term in office, and has continued to progress since. And we’re going to make sure that we’re hitting the ground running. That’s included in the April 28 announcement, but as we noted in that announcement, that’s just some of the many decisions and important work that’s before us. It is a very high priority.
    Murkowski: So, you’ve spoken to the adequacy to meet the PFAS mission. Are you concerned about your numbers EPA wide to do your overall mission, not just specific to PFAS, but with everything else that you’re looking at? Because the reduction in staffing, is very significant, you’ve got to admit that. And so, you’ve got a big task, and we want you to be able to execute on that. So, just want to hear from you whether you have any concerns about your staffing levels right now.
    Zeldin: Madam Chair, we are going to fulfill all statutory obligations. One of the things that was a surprise to me coming into the position was just how many people who are employees at the agency were not working on any statutory obligation at all. And I also want to say that there are a lot of amazing, dedicated employees at EPA. The American public might feel disconnected from agency employees who might be working in Washington, D.C., but there are a lot of people who have been there for a long time. They believe in the agency mission. They work hard every single day. One of the reforms we brought in coming in is ending COVID year remote work. And it’s great to hear noise in the building, to see the foot traffic, and to see people being productive and collaborative. But if anyone out there was tuning in and they don’t know what the agency looks like, it’s filled with a lot of amazing, dedicated workers who believe in the agency’s mission, and we’re going to work hard to make the public proud.
    Murkowski: Well, I’m glad that you’ve acknowledged your workforce, because I think you do have people who are good public servants. They’re proud of the work they do, and they’re the work that they do has value. And we want to recognize that.
    Closing Remarks
    Murkowski: We will have further discussion about so many of these issues: the reorganization, what we’re seeing with the grants. But I appreciate, Administrator Zeldin, you appearing before the committee, responding to our questions. We will hold the record open until May 21 for additional questions from members and would look forward to your responses to those as well.
    And with that, the committee stands adjourned – we’ve got to vote!

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Hagerty, Colleagues Reintroduce Legislation to Block Unconstitutional Tracking of Gun Store Purchases

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Tennessee Bill Hagerty

    WASHINGTON—This week, United States Senator Bill Hagerty (R-TN), a member of the Senate Banking Committee, led his colleagues in reintroducing the Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act, legislation to protect gun store customers by blocking unconstitutional surveillance via Merchant Category Codes (MCCs) that unlawfully track gun store purchases. Representative Riley Moore (R-WV-03) has introduced companion legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    Co-sponsors of the legislation include Senators Jim Justice (R-WV), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Jim Risch (R-ID), Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), Bill Cassidy (R-LA), John Hoeven (R-ND), Ted Budd (R-NC), Steve Daines (R-MT), Mike Lee (R-UT), Pete Ricketts (R-NE), Kevin Cramer (R-ND), Mike Crapo (R-ID), Rick Scott (R-FL), Markwayne Mullin (R-OK), Deb Fischer (R-NE), and John Barrasso (R-WY).

    “Merchant category codes should never be used to track and surveil gun store customers,” said Senator Hagerty. “If this alarming overreach isn’t stopped, radical leftists won’t just target gun owners—they’ll weaponize the financial system against anyone who makes a purchase that doesn’t conform to their agenda. This legislation is critical to preventing the politicization of MCC codes and securing the civil liberties of law-abiding Americans and the Second Amendment.”

    “Any attempt to collect data on Americans simply exercising their God-given rights is wrong, and I won’t stand for it. I’m proud to have led this fight at the state level as West Virginia State Treasurer – where we were the first in the nation to codify this policy that protects our Second Amendment rights,” said Congressman Riley Moore. “I’m proud to be leading this fight with Reps. Hudson and Barr in the House and honored to have Senator Hagerty leading it in the Senate.”

    “Gun control proponents, including those in Congress, have already admitted the use of a firearm retailer-specific Merchant Category Code is intended to monitor and approve firearm and ammunition purchases,” said Lawrence G. Keane, NSSF Senior Vice President & General Counsel. “Senator Hagerty’s bill would prohibit the government from creating watchlists or determining when law-abiding citizens may exercise their Second Amendment rights, which starts with legally purchasing a firearm or ammunition. No American should be concerned that banks or the federal government are employing this Orwellian antigun scheme to monitor the exercise of their Second Amendment rights when they lawfully purchase firearms or ammunition products. NSSF thanks Senator Hagerty for his principled leadership to stand up for Second Amendment rights and against gun control special interest groups and big government lawmakers who want to monitor and deny lawful transactions by law-abiding Americans. Americans should worry about what’s in their wallet, not who’s in their wallet.”

    Background:

    The Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act builds upon Hagerty’s commitment to defending Americans’ constitutional rights from politicized and abusive overreach.

    In September 2022, Hagerty criticized the President and CEO of Amalgamated Bank for its efforts to use MCC codes to target gun store customers.

    In February 2024, Hagerty grilled former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on reports that the Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network coordinated with financial institutions to monitor for “extremist indicators,” including lawful transactions at stores that sell firearms.

    Last Congress, Hagerty introduced the Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act in response to revelations that MCC Codes were used to implement unconstitutional surveillance on gun store consumers.

    Full text of the Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act can be found here.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Chris Brown charged by the Metropolitan Police Service

    Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

    A man has been charged following an investigation by detectives in the Metropolitan Police Service.

    Chris Brown, 36 (05.05.89), who is a US National, was charged on Thursday, 15 May with grievous bodily harm with intent.

    He remains in custody and will appear at Manchester Magistrates’ Court at 10:00hrs on Friday, 16 May.

    The charge relates to an assault, which reportedly took place at a venue in Hanover Square in London, on Sunday, 19 February 2023.

    MIL Security OSI –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Read More (Rep. Steube and Sen. Moody Introduce Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act)

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Greg Steube (FL-17)

    May 15, 2025 | Press ReleasesWASHINGTON —  U.S. Representative Greg Steube (R-Fla.) and Senator Ashley Moody (R-Fla.) today introduced the Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act to restore the casualty and theft loss tax deduction for Americans who have suffered devastating losses from fraud, cybercrime, structural home failures, or natural disasters.Under current law, taxpayers can only deduct casualty and theft losses if the loss occurred in a federally declared disaster area. This recent restriction, which has been a burden on so many Florida seniors and families, is on a previously allowed deduction dating back to before the start of the federal income tax which allowed many victims to deduct losses on assets they no longer possess. The Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act restores this deduction and retroactively applies it for tax years 2018 through 2024, providing much-needed relief to victims of theft.This bill addresses the recent policy recommendations by National Taxpayer Advocate Erin M. Collins, who was appointed by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin during the Trump Administration.“Hardworking Americans, especially seniors, who fall victim to scams, cybercrime, or disasters should not be forced to pay taxes on income they no longer have,” said Rep. Steube. “Victims of crime, calamity, and fraud deserve peace of mind as they work to regain their footing. This bill protects Americans who have lost everything by restoring fairness and common sense to the tax code.”“As hurricane season is around the corner, I will continue supporting policies that protect Floridians from scammers and fraudsters,” said Senator Moody. “My Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams and Disasters Act will provide commonsense tax relief for victims, often seniors, who have been financially devastated by scams, crimes, or destruction from disasters. This legislation will help folks get back on their feet when they experience hardship. When I was Attorney General of Florida, I made sure to fight for Floridians who fell victim to scams, and I will continue bringing this fight to D.C. so that folks have the protections they need.”The Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act is supported by the AARP, AICPA-CIMA, AMAC Action, American Land Title Association, CFP Board, The Elder Justice Coalition, Family Business Coalition, Financial Services Institute, Investment Advisers Association, the National Association of Consumer Advocates, National Association of Enrolled Agents, National Association of Realtors, Operation Shamrock, and National Association of Government Defined Contribution Administrators (NAGDCA). 
    “Family-owned businesses are built over generations, and when they fall victim to scams, disasters, or structural failures, the impact is devastating. Congressman Steube’s Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act restores a vital protection in the tax code that ensures these families aren’t taxed on income they’ve lost through no fault of their own. This is a common-sense targeted fix that reflects the realities family businesses face today.” —Palmer Schoening, Chairman of Family Business Coalition Background:Along with their work on the Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act, Representative Steube and Senator Moody have championed the needs of victims of natural disasters and scams. In the last Congress, Representative Steube’s bipartisan Federal Disaster Tax Relief Act was passed and signed into law. This casualty loss legislation delivered much-needed tax relief for victims of disasters across 48 states between 2021 and 2025. While serving as Florida Attorney General, Moody helped lead the fight to prevent cybercriminals from targeting senior citizens, including shutting down six cyber schemes in less than three months in 2024. 
    Read the full bill here.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: ICE Utah search warrant results in 19 arrested

    Source: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

    ST. GEORGE, Utah — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, in a joint operation with Washington City Police Department, served a Utah state search warrant May 14 for possession of false documents and illegal drugs at a collection of residences in Washington City.

    Those into custody include:

    • Six illegal aliens with final orders of removal, two illegal aliens with expedited removal orders, five illegal aliens with voluntary departures, and three with notices to appear before an immigration judge.
    • An illegal alien from Mexico with charges of identity theft and forgery.
    • An illegal alien from Guatemala with prior removal from the United States, and current charges for identity theft and forgery.

    “By leveraging the assets of federal and local law enforcement, we will continue to successfully fulfill our mission of ensuring public safety and national security,” said ICE Homeland Security Investigations Las Vegas Special Agent in Charge Lester R. Hayes, Jr. “Our commitment to working with our law enforcement partners will ultimately result in safer neighborhoods and stronger communities.”

    During the search, 19 subjects were encountered and arrested for federal crimes, including being illegally present in the U.S., illegal reentry after a prior order of removal, Utah state charges related to forgery and identity theft, and one Utah state arrest warrant for drug-related charges.

    The focus of the search warrant was a sprawling home with subdivisions throughout, designed to house dozens of adults in cramped, unsafe conditions. Local law enforcement records reflect multiple police contacts over a multiyear period for domestic-violence related shooting, drug-related calls, and numerous noise complaints, and was generally regarded as an “extremely problematic” dwelling by local law enforcement and city leadership.

    This was a joint investigation between HSI St. George and the Washington City Police Department, with heavy involvement and support from Enforcement and Removal Operations in St. George, the U.S. Marshals Service, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the St. George Police Department, and the Washington County Sheriff’s Office. All arrested individuals will remain in ICE custody pending criminal or removal proceedings.

    For more information, visit ICE.gov or follow HSI Las Vegas on X at @HSILasVegas.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: U.S. Marshals Arrest Man in Arizona Wanted for Child Rape in Tennessee

    Source: US Marshals Service

    Memphis, TN – On May 14, 2025, the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS) in the Western District of Tennessee and the District of Arizona joined to arrest Jerry Scott, 35, for multiple sex-related crimes, including assaulting a minor.

    On November 17, 2021, Shelby County issued an arrest warrant for Jerry Scott for the offenses of Rape of a Child, Aggravated Sexual Battery, and Incest.

    On May 8, 2025, at the request of the Shelby County District Attorney’s Office, the fugitive case was adopted by USMS Two Rivers Violent Fugitive Task Force (TRVFTF) in Memphis.

    The fugitive investigation revealed that Scott was in Tucson, Arizona. The TRVFTF coordinated with the USMS Arizona Wanted Task Force, which operates in the Tucson area. On May 14, 2025, the Arizona Task Force located Scott in Tucson and arrested him without incident. At the time of this release, he awaits extradition to Shelby County, Tennessee.

    The U.S. Marshals Service Two Rivers Violent Fugitive Task Force is a multi-agency task force within Western Tennessee. The TRVFTF has offices in Memphis and Jackson, and its membership is primarily composed of Deputy U.S. Marshals, Shelby, Fayette, Tipton, and Gibson County Sheriff’s Deputies, Memphis and Jackson Police Officers, Tennessee Department of Correction Special Agents and the Tennessee Highway Patrol. Since 2021, the TRVFTF has captured over 3,000 violent offenders and sexual predators.

    MIL Security OSI –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Update on Kopu Road incident

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Kopu Road between Kopu and Thames has reopened, after being closed earlier this morning when a person was found with what appeared to be serious injuries.

    Police have now established that the person had suffered a medical event.

    The person has been airlifted to Waikato Hospital and the road has reopened.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congresista Ramirez Leads 109 Members to Protect the Constitutional Right to Birthright Citizenship

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Delia Ramirez – Illinois (3rd District)

    Washington, DC —  Today, Congresswoman Delia C. Ramirez (IL-03), proud daughter of immigrants and citizen by birthright, introduced legislation to block the implementation of President Trump’s unconstitutional Executive Order that illegally and unconstitutionally seeks to end citizenship for children born in the United States. The Born in the USA Act is co-led by a coalition of Members of Congress that includes the Hispanic Caucus Chair Adriano Espaillat (NY-13), Asian Pacific American Caucus Chair Grace Meng (NY-06), Black Caucus Chair Yvette Clarke (NY-09), Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin (MD-08), and Derek Tran (CA-45)

    The legislation prohibits any government funds from being appropriated or used to carry out President Donald Trump’s unconstitutional and illegal Executive Order 14160, “Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship.”

    “Trump has posed the question of who gets to be an American. The fact is that every citizen not naturalized in this country is a citizen by birthright. And it is important to remember that our nation’s history would not be complete without the children of immigrants who, like me, are citizens by birthright and pride themselves on being AMERICANS, said Congresswoman Ramirez.” I am both a daughter of immigrants and the daughter of America;  a proud Chapina and an American by birthright. It is my honor to lead 109 members of Congress to ensure not a single dollar goes to Trump’s illegal, unconstitutional attempt to undermine our Constitution, our rights, our liberties, and the soul of our nation.” 

    “Protecting birthright citizenship from Donald Trump’s reckless executive order is our duty, not only as Democrats, but as Americans,” said CHC Chair Adriano Espaillat. “The Fourteenth Amendment was forged in the ashes of the Civil War and refined through 150 years of jurisprudence. No president can change it by executive order, and Trump’s shameless attempt to do so is a grave threat to the very ideals of our nation and of a binding Constitution. Unilaterally modifying the highest law in the land is antithetical to our American values, and we will continue to fight these heinous actions by an administration that seeks to redefine what we, as a nation, stand for.”

    “Birthright citizenship is enshrined in the Constitution and has been affirmed by the Supreme Court numerous times — including in the landmark United States v. Wong Kim Ark decision — yet President Trump is determined to overrule this century-old precedent and eliminate one of the most common pathways for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders to become U.S. citizens,” said Rep. Grace Meng, Chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus. “Not on our watch. I am proud to introduce the Born in the USA Act with my colleagues to stand up for American values and stand against this unconstitutional executive overreach.”

    “Birthright citizenship has been the law of the land since 1868, when the 14th Amendment overturned Dred Scott and established equal citizenship by birth,” said Ranking Member Jamie Raskin. “Donald Trump cannot erase the parts of the Constitution he doesn’t like or decide who counts as an American by executive order. The Born in the USA Act will ensure that no taxpayer dollars are used to enforce this unlawful order, which would compel federal agencies, from the State Department to the Social Security Administration, to deny or question U.S. citizenship for children born on American soil, thereby undermining a fundamental constitutional right that has defined our nation since the Civil War.”

    “For over 140 years, birthright citizenship has been a cornerstone of American law and culture,” said Rep. Derek Tran. “We have always been a nation of immigrants–my own parents came to this country as refugees, and I gained citizenship through the birthright principle. So many people across the country share my story and have enriched our nation in countless ways as productive members of American society. I’m proud to stand with my colleagues in introducing the Born in the USA Act to protect birthright citizenship and ensure that all those born on U.S. soil are awarded the Constitutional protections they deserve.”

    The bill is cosponsored by Congressmembers Raja Krishnamoorthi (IL-08), Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC-AL), Juan Vargas (CA-52), Shri Thanedar (MI-13), Rashida Tlaib (MI-12), Henry Johnson (GA-04), Jasmine Crockett (TX-30), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY-14), Linda T. Sánchez (CA-38), Becca Balint (VT-AL), Jesús G. “Chuy” García (IL-04), Madeleine Dean (GA-05), Nikema Williams (GA-05), André Carson (IN-07), Lateefah Simon (CA-12), James P. McGovern (MA-02), Sylvia R. Garcia (TX-29), Ritchie Torres (NY-15), Jonathan L. Jackson (IL-01), Nydia M. Velázquez (NY-07), Mary Gay Scanlon (PA-05), Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (FL-20), Yassamin Ansari (AZ-03), Robert Garcia (CA-42), Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ-12), Dan Goldman (NY-10), Maxwell Frost (FL-10), Paul D. Tonko (NY-20), Darren Soto (FL-09), Dave Min (CA-47), Mark Pocan (WI-02), Bennie G. Thompson (MS-2), Andrea Salinas (OR-06), Sydney Kamlager-Dove (CA-37), LaMonica McIver (NJ-10), Pramila Jayapal (WA-07), Dina Titus (NV-01), Ilhan Omar (MN-05), Gabe Amo (RI-01), John Garamendi (CA-08), Sarah McBride (DE-00), Nanette Barragán (CA-44), Stephen Lynch (MA-08), Angie Craig (MN-02), Summer L. Lee (PA-12), Greg Casar (TX-35), Jan Schakowsky (IL-09), Chellie Pingree (ME-01), Gilbert R. Cisneros (CA-31), Maxine Dexter (OR-03), Jill Tokuda (HI-02), Salud Carbajal (CA-24), Emanuel Cleaver (MO-05), Steve Cohen (TN-09), Gregory W. Meeks (NY-05), Luz Rivas (CA-29), Brad Sherman (CA-32), Wesley Bell (MO-01), Brendan Boyle (PA-02), Ayanna Pressley (MA-07), Robin L. Kelly (IL-02), Frederica S. Wilson (FL-24), Ro Khanna (CA-17), Timothy M. Kennedy (NY-26), Troy Carter (LA-02), Zoe Lofgren (CA-18), Josh Gottheimer (NJ-05), Gabe Vasquez (NM-02), Ted W. Lieu (CA-36), Robert J. Menendez (NJ-08), Shontel M. Brown (OH-11), Sara Jacobs (CA-51), Jennifer L. McClellan (VA-04), Kevin Mullin (CA-15), Greg Stanton (AZ-04), Veronica Escobar (TX-16), Julie Johnson (TX-32), Brittany Pettersen (CO-07), Janelle S. Bynum (OR-05), Mikie Sherrill (NJ-11), Teresa Leger Fernandez (NM-03), Mark Takano(CA 39), Glenn Ivey (MD-04), Jerrold Nadler (NY-12), Pablo José Hernández (PR-00), Sam Liccardo (CA-16), Eric Swalwell (CA-14), Al Green (TX-09), Raul Ruiz (CA-25), Joaquin Castro (TX-20), Emily Randall (WA-06), Judy Chu (CA-28), Danny Davis (IL-07), Lauren Underwood (IL-14), Valerie Foushee (NC-04), Debbie Dingell (MI-06), Terri A. Sewell (AL-07), Laura Friedman (CA-30), Betty McCollum (MN-04), Morgan McGarvey (KY-03), Julia Brownley (CA-26), Marc Veasey (TX-33), Suzanne Bonamici (OR-01).

    The legislation also counts with the support of local and national organizations, including American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), National Immigration Law Center (NILC), Stop AAPI Hate, FWD.us, Center for American Progress (CAP), OCA-Asian Pacific American Advocates, National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC), Japanese American Citizens League (JACL), Asian Americans Advancing Justice (AAJC), Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (ICIRR), Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP), African Communities Together, Haitian Bridge Alliance, Immigration Hub, and UndocuBlack. 

    The Born in the USA Act is a companion to S.646, introduced in the Senate by Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV). 

    Text of the bill, CLICK HERE. 

    BACKGROUND:

    On January 29, 2025, Donald Trump signed Executive Order 14160, Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship. The executive order illegally and unconstitutionally seeks to undermine the constitutional right to birthright citizenship. 

    The 14th Amendment guarantees that all people born in the U.S. are U.S. citizens. In the 1898 United States v. Wong Kim Ark case, the Supreme Court affirmed that the 14th Amendment protects the birthright citizenship of all children born in the country, including those from undocumented parents.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Dan Goldman Joins Capitol Police Officers, Rep. Swalwell to Condemn Trump’s Pardons for J6 Rioters and GOP’s Complicity During National Police Week

    Source: US Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10)

    Goldman Urged House Republicans to Hang Plaque Honoring Capitol and Metropolitan Police Officers Who Protected Nation’s Capital from Insurrectionists 

     

    See Photos from the Press Conference Here 

    Washington D.C. – Congressman Dan Goldman today joined January 6th police officers Aquilino Gonell and Daniel Hodges, as well as Congressman Eric Swalwell (CA-14) and other elected officials, to condemn the Republican Party’s complete abandonment of capitol police officers who defended lawmakers and the Capitol Complex on January 6th, 2021 during national Police Week. 

    “Republicans can’t claim to ‘back the blue’ while they stand idly by and let Donald Trump pardon violent rioters who beat police officers,” Congressman Dan Goldman said. “I’m proud to stand with Officer Gonell and Hodges for Police Week — men who risked their lives to defend our Capitol — and call out the GOP’s cowardice and hypocrisy. Over two years ago, Congress passed a law to honor these heroes with a plaque. It’s still sitting in storage because Republican leadership refuses to act. Until they condemn these pardons and honor these officers, their hollow words of support for law enforcement are meaningless.” 

    Upon taking office on January 21, 2025, Donald Trump issued a blanket pardon for 1,500 duly convicted January 6th insurrectionists. The same week, Republican Congressman Bilirakis (FL-12) met with Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the far-right extremist group the Oath Keepers, in the Capitol complex to celebrate his pardon. Additionally, Republican Congresswoman Lauren Boebert (CO-04) offered private tours to those who stormed the Capitol building on January 6th. 

    It has been 792 days since a law Democrats passed in 2022 took effect requiring the House of Representatives to hang a commemorative plaque acknowledging the sacrifice that Capitol and D.C. Metropolitan police officers made defending lawmakers on January 6th, 2021.  

    Congressman Goldman has continued to push back against Donald Trump’s anti-democratic actions and his efforts to whitewash the violence of January 6th. 

    This January, Congressman Dan Goldman hosted Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn and Metropolitan Police Officer Daniel Hodges to condemn Donald Trump’s blanket pardons for roughly 1,500 January 6th insurrectionists convicted of assaulting police officers, seditious conspiracy, and other violent crimes. 
    Last year, Congressman Goldman introduced a resolution censuring Congresswoman Elise Stefanik for conduct unbecoming of a member of Congress, including referring to the duly convicted insurrectionists as ‘hostages.’ 
    Last winter, Goldman joined Congressman Jamie Raskin (MD-08) and Senator Edward J. Markey (D-MA) in introducing the ‘Preventing Private Paramilitary Activity Act’ to protect citizens from intimidation and mass mobilizations of paramilitary groups. The legislation would federally prohibit those in private paramilitary organizations from conducting activity with firearms. 

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    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: McClellan Joins SEEC Energy and Commerce Members to Slam Republicans’ Attack on American Health and Affordability

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Jennifer McClellan (Virginia 4th District)

    This week, Congresswoman Jennifer McClellan (VA) joined House Sustainable Energy and Environment Coalition (SEEC) members on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, slamming House Republicans’ obscene budget reconciliation plan to gut life-saving pollution reduction programs, raise Americans’ electricity bills, cut off critical support for high-tech American manufacturing, and legalize corruption for oil and gas companies. These members included SEEC Co-Chairs Reps. Doris Matsui (CA) and Paul Tonko (NY) and were joined by their fellow SEEC colleagues Reps. Nanette Barragán (CA), Kathy Castor (FL), Yvette Clarke (NY), Debbie Dingell (MI), Kevin Mullin (CA), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY), Scott Peters (CA), Kim Schrier (WA), and Darren Soto (FL). 

    “I know the Trump Administration and some of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle don’t like the word environmental justice, but what environmental justice is designed to do is recognize that there are communities in this country — white, black, low-income, urban and rural — where energy projects were put in place with no input from the community, where the people didn’t have the resources to fight back or even knew what was happening,” said Congresswoman McClellan. “These are the same communities that have some of the poorest health outcomes in the country. We should want to help address centuries of injustice and invest in those communities, but this bill guts those programs altogether – that’s not justice.”

    “Republicans’ reconciliation bill is a shameless sell-out to corporations at the expense of hard-working Americans’ health and prosperity,” said Congresswoman Matsui. “This bill eliminates and defunds pollution protections and pollution reduction programs that my constituents rely on, illegally and insidiously clawing back funding that is already supporting projects in communities across this country. In my district, La Familia Counseling Center was poised to do transformative work with their Community Change Grant—but Republicans are gutting that progress to pay for tax breaks for their billionaire friends. As if that weren’t enough, Republicans’ bill contains a shocking and outrageous attempt to legalize corruption for oil and gas companies, allowing polluting corporations to simply buy all the permits they need to build a pipeline through American communities, no questions asked. This kind of bribery is how dictatorships operate. This is not how America works. We cannot allow this egregious corruption to become law.”

    “My Republican colleagues claim they are going after the clean energy programs that are, in their words ‘reckless’ and favor ‘wokeness over sensible policy,’” said Congressman Tonko. “Which programs are those? Is it the $12 million in unobligated funds to reduce air pollution in schools? How about DOE money to train contractors to retrofit people’s homes? What about money to upgrade our ports with the latest and greatest technologies? These are just a few examples of commonsense investments that are being targeted today that are creating American jobs and deploying new technologies that will indeed reduce pollution. And when you start to list them out, you can see how ridiculous this proposal is. But why on Earth would Republicans be doing this? Well, we know these funds will be used to partially offset yet another round of tax cuts, the benefits of which will overwhelmingly go to the wealthiest.”

    “Republican cuts to environmental justice grants will directly harm the health of our communities,” said Congresswoman Barragán. “Medicaid helps many access and afford health care in vulnerable communities with clean air and water challenges. Yet, Republicans have proposed the largest Medicaid cut in history. It’s all connected and Republicans want to go backward on the environment and health care access.”

     “You should hold on to your wallets, because House Republicans are coming after your electric bills to pay for a massive tax giveaway to billionaires like Elon Musk,” said Congresswoman Castor. “Because let’s face it, American families are being financially squeezed right now – especially my neighbors in Florida still struggling to rebuild from Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Utility companies in at least 19 states have hiked rates as much as $40 per month since the Trump administration began. Republicans have not brought forth a single bill to lower energy costs for hardworking American families. Instead, what they’re offering today is a handout to big oil companies and polluters and the impact will be to raise your electric bill.” 

    “There’s nothing and no one House Republicans won’t betray just to fund obscene tax breaks for their wealthy donors,” said Congresswoman Clarke. “By taking an axe to the critical programs Americans rely on to protect them from the climate crisis, reduce pollution, and keep energy affordable, our colleagues across the aisle have once again proven they are incapable of putting the needs of their communities above the demands of their billionaire puppet masters.”

    “What this bill does is create total chaos for the auto industry in repealing EPA’s emission standards for light and medium-duty vehicles and NHTSA’s corporate average fuel economy standards. What the domestic auto industry needs now more than anything is certainty. My priority is to protect American jobs, maintain our competitive edge in automotive manufacturing, ensure the United States leads in technology and innovation, and that we cede our leadership to nobody,” said Congresswoman Dingell. “Our policies must reflect the priorities on the ground, prioritize consumer choice and offer a practical, ambitious path forward. To remain competitive, the US must align with the global shift towards hybrids, electric vehicles, and down the road, who else knows what other technology. Here’s a fact. The global marketplace wants electric vehicles and I will be damned if I let China beat us in that market.”

    “Republicans are ramming through a disastrous, ugly budget bill that is going to cause widespread harm to Americans and our environment. Why? So they can give massive tax cuts to billionaires, corporations, and oil companies. Republicans want to strip health care away from over 13.7 million Americans who rely on Medicaid, which will raise prices for the privately insured too,” said Congressman Mullin. “The bill also cuts funding for clean energy innovation while allowing oil and gas companies to buy their way out of having to follow environmental laws. This will stagnate American progress in developing affordable, sustainable solutions to meet our energy needs. This isn’t efficiency, it’s cruelty and Republicans are making it clear that they don’t care about raising costs for working families.”

    “In my time here in Congress, I have participated in investigations of large corporations that have poisoned communities across the country. A lot of times, these communities were poisoned due to large corporations that were exploiting corrupt loopholes in the law in order to poison the most vulnerable communities in America,” said Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez. “And I deeply fear that there is a loophole and similar provision in this bill. This bill allows gas companies to pay $1 million in order for their project to bypass the traditional permitting process. In fact, this bill allows natural gas pipeline projects to pay a fee of $10 million to cut the line and bypass the normal permitting process. Allowing massive corporations to simply cut a check to bypass the very real reasons why permitting exists in the first place, poses a deep and grave danger to people across the country.”

    “Last Congress, my Republican colleagues were insistent that we should have an all-of-the-above energy strategy, one that leveraged our natural resources, unleashed American innovation, and cut through bureaucratic red tape,” said Congressman Peters. “Which is why I am confused that we are considering a reconciliation bill that picks winners and losers, and elevates expensive, outdated, and inefficient sources like coal over cheap American-made energy like solar, wind, and storage. Why does this bill provide government-backed insurance to coal plants, as the President of the United States single-handedly kills hundreds, if not thousands, of clean energy jobs across the country by illegally targeting projects and weaponizing the permitting process?” 

    “This bill completely bypasses communities and landowners, and these ‘pay-to-play’ provisions put not just a thumb but an entire arm, maybe a body on the scale favoring oil and gas,” said Congresswoman Schrier. “It’s giant corporations like Shell, BP, Chevron. They’re the ones that have the wherewithal to pay to bypass all permitting requirements. This bill is more of the ‘drill baby drill’ agenda that we hear every week from our Republican colleagues. I’m all for streamlining permitting to address energy demand and infrastructure that has real impacts on our communities. But there’s ways to streamline permitting and get new energy resources online without sidelining solar, wind, nuclear, hydropower, or hydrogen projects. Streamlining permitting is key if we’re going to meet energy demand. Clean power should have the same opportunity as oil and gas and we shouldn’t be disregarding important environmental protections.”

    “This is a bad deal for the South, whether it’s consumers in Florida or whether it’s all these high-paying jobs going to all these Southern states. This is a job killer,” said Congressman Soto. “In addition, adding in defunding of interstate transmission lines. I’ve heard from both sides of the aisle how often this is critical. So why in the world would you defund the interstate transmission lines? That makes no sense. That will raise energy prices. It will prevent efficiencies in the market. And it will prevent different states from specializing in new types of energy, whether it’s modular nuclear or renewable energy that’s being formulated here in Florida.”

    Background

    House Republicans are gutting critical pollution protections and pollution reduction programs, raising American household energy costs, pulling the rug out from under America’s manufacturing sector, and creating a brazen new “pay-to-play” bribery scheme for polluting corporations. Here’s what the bill does:   

    • Repeals and rescinds funding from Environmental Protection Agency programs that protect Americans from pollution and help American households save money on energy costs and medical bills. Some of these programs include:
      • Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund that is dedicated to lowering energy bills and cutting pollution.
      • Environmental and Climate Justice Block Grants that support disadvantaged communities to reduce pollution and pollution-related health impacts in their communities.
      • Methane Emissions and Waste Reduction Incentive Program to reduce pollution and waste from the oil and gas sector, improving the health and economic well-being of overburdened communities, while also saving energy.
      • Clean Heavy Duty Vehicle Program that helps communities replace old polluting diesel engines and vehicles—some of the dirtiest vehicles on the road—with new, clean vehicles.
      • Clean Ports Program that helps improve air quality around U.S. ports and address the public health and environmental impacts to surrounding communities.
    • Repeals life-saving Clean Air Act standards for vehicle pollution and fuel efficiency that help Americans save money at the pump and improve health outcomes in our communities.
    • Eliminates funding for the Department of Energy Loan Programs and the Advanced Industrial Facilities Deployment Program that help commercialize next-generation American-made technology, bringing manufacturing back to America and creating good-paying jobs, while also developing cutting-edge technologies that save Americans money and reduce pollution in American communities.
    • Creates a pay-to-play bribery scheme for polluters that allows oil and gas companies to pay a fee and bypass standard permitting, environmental reviews, and judicial review processes. Whether it’s a natural gas pipeline or a natural gas export terminal, companies can simply buy all the permits they need to build their pipeline through your community. This is blatant and unconscionable corruption. 

    Republicans had multiple opportunities to improve the bill and ensure that Americans’ pocketbooks, health, and livelihoods are protected, but Republicans repeatedly rejected Democratic amendments, including Democratic-led efforts to: 

    • Ensure that this bill does not raise energy costs for American households. Representative Castor’s amendment would have required the U.S. Energy Information Administration to publish the impacts of the Energy Subtitle of the bill on monthly energy costs for American households.
    • Protect the health and safety of our families and communities. Representative Dingell’s amendment would have prevented the repeal of the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.
    • Hold polluters accountable and prevent the legalization of corruption under this bill. Representative Ocasio-Cortez’s amendment would have required the Inspector General of the Department of Energy to certify that this bill will not increase risks of corruption or ‘pay-to-play’ politics.
    • Protect American energy independence and deliver cheap energy to Americans. Representative Auchincloss’ amendment would have prevented the energy provisions from going into effect until the Secretary of Energy certifies that tariffs on energy imports are no greater than they were on January 19, 2025.  

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    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Lawler Joins Colleagues in Calling Attention to Haiti’s Deepening Crisis

    Source: US Congressman Mike Lawler (R, NY-17)

    Washington, D.C. – 5/15/25… Last week, Congressman Mike Lawler (NY-17) joined Congressman Rich McCormick (GA-07) and 13 of their colleagues in sending a letter to Secretary Rubio conveying their grave concerns over the deteriorating security situation in Haiti as missionaries, humanitarian aid workers, and countless innocent civilians face deadly threats from criminal gangs that now control much of the country. 

    They also called for coordination with the Haitian Transitional Presidential Council, Haitian National Police, and the United Nations Multilateral Security Support Mission to restore peace and a stable government.

    Criminal gangs have overrun major urban centers, including the capital Port-au-Prince. Recent reports indicate that these gangs, such as the Viv Ansanm coalition, now control over 85% of the capital and are expanding into previously stable areas. Local healthcare workers have described the complete takeover of their campus by armed gangs who have looted homes, ransacked facilities, and stolen critical supplies including medications and medical equipment. Over one million Haitians have been displaced due to gang violence, and UN security forces have struggled to stabilize the situation. 

    “The humanitarian crisis in Haiti is heartbreaking and deeply concerning. As violent gangs threaten civilians, including American missionaries and aid workers, the U.S. must act swiftly to restore order and protect lives. My district is home to the second-largest Haitian American population per capita in the country, and I know how deeply these families are feeling the pain of what’s happening,” said Congressman Mike Lawler.

    “The United States has an important responsibility to act decisively to mitigate this humanitarian and security crisis in Haiti. We must enhance protective measures for our citizens and humanitarian workers while working with local authorities to restore peace and stability,” said Congressman Rich McCormick.

    “Failure to address Haiti’s gang crisis risks a point of no return. I thank Representative McCormick for working with me in this bipartisan call for action. Our letter urges the administration to present a clear strategy to restore order, hold perpetrators accountable, resume aid, and return Haiti to the Haitian people,” said Congressman Gregory Meeks (NY-05).

    “Haiti is on the verge of collapse with violent gangs controlling the center of Port-au-Prince just blocks away from the National Palace,” said Congresswoman Maria Elvira Salazar (FL-28). “It is time for the United States to take a real leadership role in addressing the crisis with hard security solutions capable of stopping the gangs’ advance and restoring peace to Haiti.” 

    “Haiti continues to confront a dire political, security, and humanitarian crisis that has caused unimaginable amounts of human suffering,” said Congresswoman Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (FL-20). “To prevent the situation from deteriorating any further, I am joining my colleagues on both sides of the aisle in calling on the U.S. Department of State to respond immediately. A long-term solution to this crisis means that we must crack down on violent gangs and the elites who fund them, while simultaneously curtailing the flow of illicit firearms.”

    “The Haitian people are enduring a vicious cycle of horrific violence at the hands of brutal gangs,” said Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-25). “The U.S. must urgently support efforts to restore stability, protect women and girls from harm, and uphold human rights. I remain committed to working with bipartisan colleagues to equip Haiti’s security forces to protect civilians—and to cut off the illicit flow of American weapons to the criminal organizations threatening their safety.”

    “The deteriorating security situation in Haiti is more urgent now than ever. Just last year I went on two rescue missions to Haiti bringing home 23 Americans and helping relocate 59 disabled Haitian children to safety. While there, I witnessed firsthand the threats faced by Americans, locals, and humanitarian workers, as criminal gangs endanger lives and disrupt vital aid efforts. I stand with my colleagues to urge Secretary Rubio to take a leading role in restoring stability in Haiti,” said Congressman Cory Mills (FL-07).

    “The heartbreaking reports out of Haiti are a call to action. Families are being driven from their homes, clinics and churches looted, and communities held hostage by violent gangs,” said Congresswomen Lois Frankel (FL-22). “With nearly half a million Haitian Americans living in Florida, many with deep ties to loved ones still on the island, the United States should act urgently to protect American citizens and humanitarian workers, and support the Haitian people in their fight to reclaim their country from lawlessness and despair.”

    “The humanitarian crisis and security situation in Haiti is devastating,” said Congressman Bill Keating (MA-09). “The State Department must act to enhance protective measures and resources for Americans in Haiti while also coordinating with Haitian authorities and the UN Multinational Security Support Mission to limit the flow of illicit weapons.” 

    “The crisis unfolding in Haiti is not just a matter of regional instability—it is a humanitarian catastrophe that demands urgent international response. Gangs now control over 85% of Port-au-Prince, and more than one million people have been displaced, many forced to choose between starvation and submission to armed groups. Haiti’s struggle did not begin with this wave of violence—it is rooted in a long legacy of foreign exploitation, failed interventions, and broken promises following the 2010 earthquake and the assassination of President Moïse in 2021. As a nation with deep historical ties to Haiti, the United States has a moral and strategic obligation to protect innocent lives, support democratic governance, and help dismantle the networks trafficking arms and chaos into the region,” said Congressman Jonathan Jackson (IL-01). 

    Congressman Lawler is one of the most bipartisan members of Congress and represents New York’s 17th Congressional District, which is just north of New York City and contains all or parts of Rockland, Putnam, Dutchess, and Westchester Counties. He was rated the most effective freshman lawmaker in the 118th Congress, 8th overall, surpassing dozens of committee chairs.

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    The full letter can be found HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Lawler and Gottheimer Reintroduce Bipartisan Bill to Boost Startup Investment and Protect Demo Days

    Source: US Congressman Mike Lawler (R, NY-17)

    Washington, D.C. – 5/15/25… Congressman Mike Lawler (NY-17) and Congressman Josh Gottheimer (NJ-05) reintroduced the Helping Angels Lead Our Startups (HALOS) Act, bipartisan legislation to help early-stage companies connect with investors by clarifying federal securities laws and removing unnecessary regulatory hurdles that hinder startup growth.

    This bill defines an angel investor for purposes of the federal securities laws. It also clarifies the definition of general solicitation contained in the Securities Act to ensure that startups can discuss their products and business plans at certain events, known as “demo days,” without such discussions being considered an investment offering.

    “The HALOS Act is a bipartisan, pro-growth solution to support our startup ecosystem and help bring more great ideas to life. It ensures our innovators can focus on building the next big thing, not navigating outdated SEC rules,” said Congressman Mike Lawler. “By ensuring that demo days are not treated as securities offerings, we’re clearing a path for startups to showcase their ideas, attract investment, and grow.”

    “Small businesses are the engine that drives Jersey’s economy — with more than 950,000 small businesses generating nearly half of our state’s jobs. That’s why I’m proud to help lead the bipartisan HALOS Act, which will help more Jersey entrepreneurs access capital and secure the investments they need to grow and thrive,” said Congressman Josh Gottheimer, a member of the House Financial Services Committee. “I’ll never stop fighting to cut red tape, eliminate outdated bureaucracy, help create jobs, and spur economic growth, so that more small businesses can succeed in the Garden State.”

    Congressman Lawler is one of the most bipartisan members of Congress and represents New York’s 17th Congressional District, which is just north of New York City and contains all or parts of Rockland, Putnam, Dutchess, and Westchester Counties. He was rated the most effective freshman lawmaker in the 118th Congress, 8th overall, surpassing dozens of committee chairs.

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    Full text of the bill can be found HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Day of Ceremony and Action: May 15 is Moose Hide Pin Day

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Released on May 15, 2025

    Today, Members of the Legislative Assembly, along with Saskatchewan public service employees will wear moose hide pins to observe the annual Moose Hide Campaign, an Indigenous-led, grassroots movement that has evolved to engage Indigenous and non-Indigenous people to end violence against women and children in Canada. 

    “Throughout Canada, moose hide has become a symbol of taking a stand against violence,” Minister Responsible for First Nations, Métis and Northern Affairs Eric Schmalz said. “By wearing the moose hide pin, we not only demonstrate our stand against violence but our public commitment to end it and protect our mothers, daughters, sisters and friends.”

    “The Moose Hide Campaign stands as a commitment to honour the women and children in our lives,” Minister Responsible for the Status of Women Alana Ross said. “Together, through awareness, education and action, we can create a future free from violence – a future where women, girls and all Saskatchewan people are safe, healthy and prosperous.”

    It started in 2011, when father and daughter Paul and Raven Lacerte were hunting moose along the Highway of Tears in northern BC. Hunting moose is a grounding tradition on their ancestral land that passes knowledge from one generation to the other. The gift of the moose hide is seen as healing medicine that connects all who wear the pins to the land, culture and to each other. For more information, visit: https://moosehidecampaign.ca/. 

    Observing and promoting the Moose Hide Campaign demonstrates the Government of Saskatchewan’s commitment to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action and the Calls for Justice from the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG). It also supports the province’s implementation of the National Action Plan to End Gender-Based Violence.

    The Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls+ (MMIWG+) Community Response Fund offers $800,000 in funding for projects and events that promote and enhance prevention and build safety for Indigenous women, girls and Two Spirit+ people. Half of the funding is provided by Women and Gender Equality Canada (WAGE). Saskatchewan-based groups, including grass-roots Indigenous groups, can receive up to $40,000 for their project or event. 

    The MMIWG+ Community Response Fund is currently accepting applications. More information, as well as the online application form, is available at saskatchewan.ca/mmiwg-fund.

    To learn more about available supports and resources to help prevent and end violence and abuse and supports for those experiencing it, please visit the Status of Women Office’s website at saskatchewan.ca/swo.

    -30-

    For more information, contact:

    Karen Hill
    Government Relations
    Phone: 306-798-6095
    Email: karen.hill@gov.sk.ca 

    Mackenzie Love
    Parks, Culture and Sport
    Regina
    Phone: 306-526-8635
    Email: mackenzie.love6@gov.sk.ca

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: New B.C. council launched to support forestry in B.C.

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    The members of the Provincial Forest Advisory Council are reputable, subject-matter experts. They all have the skills and insight needed to advance stewardship of B.C.’s forests.

    All committee members were jointly appointed by the Minister of Forests and the BC Green Caucus. You can read about each committee member below.

    Co-chair:
    Garry Merkel – Centre of Indigenous Land Stewardship director, faculty of forestry, University of British Columbia (UBC)

    Garry Merkel (nadi’ denezā) is Tahltan from northwestern British Columbia – what is now known as the Stikine River area. He is a great-grandfather and is a professional forester with more than 50 years of experience working in most areas of the forest/lands sector. He is the director of the Centre of Indigenous Land Stewardship currently housed in the faculty of forestry at UBC and has a long public policy history in B.C. and beyond. The most recent was co-chairing with Al Gorley the cabinet-appointed Old Growth Review Panel that produced A New Future for Old Forests, A Strategic Review of How British Columbia Manages its Old Forests Within its Ancient Ecosystems (2021).  Government adopted the 14 recommendations in this review. Merkel continues as an independent mentor, coach, facilitator and adviser to support the government in its leadership role, the forest sector and ultimately the overall provincial land sector through this transition.

    Co-chair:
    Shannon Janzen, former vice-president and chief forester, Western Forest Products

    Shannon Janzen became the first woman in Canada to be appointed chief forester of a major forest products company in 2013 and later served as a vice-president of Western Forest Products from 2015 until 2022. Now the owner of Hypha Consulting Inc., she works with Indigenous communities to support their vision for economic and environmental reconciliation. Starting in operations, she spent over a decade in silviculture and planning, later becoming a lead negotiator for the Coast Forest Conservation Initiative. Her work in the Great Bear Rainforest earned her recognition as the Professional Forester of the Year in 2009. 

    Janzen has negotiated agreements benefiting First Nations and implemented cost-saving initiatives including LEAN supply chain programs and LiDAR Forest Inventory programs. She has also led carbon accounting for forest products and managed environmental social governance initiatives for publicly traded companies. Once a volunteer firefighter, Janzen is committed to making business sense of doing the right thing for people and the planet, tackling complex challenges with optimism and focus.

    Norah White, deputy chief forester, B.C. government

    Norah White is deputy chief forester and executive director in British Columbia’s Office of the Chief Forester within the provincial Ministry of Forests, the division of the provincial government responsible for leadership in forest stewardship and sustainable fibre supply.

    White has an extensive background in provincial forest stewardship policy and has led recent sector-wide change in the areas of forest planning, forest carbon, and the management of old forests and ecosystems.

    She holds a bachelor of science in forestry from the University of British Columbia (2004), an executive master of business administration from Simon Fraser University (2022), and a micro-certificate in forest carbon management from UBC’s faculty of forestry (2022).

    White received her registered professional forester designation in 2007 and is an active member of Forest Professionals BC. She lives within the territory of the Lekwungen peoples, also known as Victoria, B.C., with her spouse and their two daughters, ages 12 and 14.

    Jason Fisher, executive director, Forest Enhancement Society of BC

    Jason Fisher, a registered professional forester, is the executive director of the Forest Enhancement Society of BC (FESBC). FESBC invests the funding it receives from the Ministry of Forests to support forest enhancement projects throughout B.C. that reduce wildfire risk, enhance wildlife habitat, assist in the recovery of forests affected by fire, insects and disease, and/or reduce greenhouse emissions through enhancing the utilization of wood waste for bioenergy.

    Fisher earned degrees in forestry and law, and has worked in the private and public sector, serving as a vice-president with Dunkley Lumber and Pinnacle Renewable Energy and as an associate deputy minister in B.C.’s forest ministry. He is also an instructor at the University of Northern British Columbia, where he teaches a senior-level forest policy and management course. Fisher and his family live in Prince George, located within the traditional territory of the Lheidli T’enneh.

    Jeff Bromley, chairperson, United Steelworkers Wood Council

    Elected Steelworkers Wood Council Chair in 2019, Jeff Bromley was a rank and file IWA member beginning in 1994 when he was hired as an operator at the Elko Sawmill at age 25.

    Bromley was born in Richmond and grew up in the mining town of Kimberley with his mother and stepfather, who was also an IWA member at the Canal Flats sawmill. He earned his associated degree at East Kootenay Community College (now College of the Rockies) with a major in history and a minor in political science.

    Rising through the ranks of Local 1-405, Bromley was elected shop steward and plant committee secretary in 1999, and served as trustee from 2001 until 2008. His advocacy and political action activities have included the USW’s Stop the Killing, Enforce the Law campaign, the softwood lumber lobby effort in Ottawa and the Forest Renewal campaign in Victoria. Bromley has been a local union instructor through District 3’s Back to the Locals instructor program.

    Bromley was elected third vice-president of Local 1-405 in 2008 and, in 2010, graduated from the USW’s leadership development program. Elected financial secretary in 2012, he has served the local union in a full-time staff role since 2012.

    Harry Nelson, associate professor, faculty of forestry, UBC

    Harry Nelson is an associate professor in the faculty of forestry at UBC, specializing in economics and policy. His research interests are in analyzing natural and environmental resource policy around how lands and resources are managed in Canada and the forces driving change in forestry, with the goal of developing solutions that can help enhance the long run sustainability of Canadian forests and the communities and businesses that rely upon them. Long-standing areas of his research include investigating the changing role of Indigenous peoples in land and resource management in Canada and assessing how forest-sector firms, governments and others are adapting to climate change impacts in forestry.

    Hugh Scorah, postdoctoral fellow, UBC

    Hugh Scorah is a researcher at UBC forestry and a business and finance consultant for the agricultural and forest sectors. He has worked on projects related to softwood lumber trade, small and medium-sized enterprises in forestry, community forestry, wildfire risk mitigation, economics of silviculture, hydrological risk and liability in forestry, timber auction design, the economics of sustained yield forestry and pricing of forest tenures.

    Al Gorley, retired professional forester and former president, Professional Foresters Association

    Al Gorley has over 50 years experience in forestry and natural resource management. Born in Burns Lake, he lived in a variety of communities in the northwest while growing up, including Queen Charlotte City (Daajing Giids), Kitwanga, Terrace, and Prince Rupert. His early career with the BC Forest Service saw him stationed in Houston, Lower Post, Ootsa Lake and Smithers.

    During a second stint in Houston as forest district manager, he also served as president of the Association of British Columbia Forest Professionals and board chair for Northwest Community College. In 1994, he was appointed regional manager for the Prince George Forest Region and, for a while, worked concurrently as executive director of Forest Practices Code implementation. In 1998, he moved to Victoria to take on the role of vice-president for land and resources at Forest Renewal BC and was later promoted to chief operating officer.

    In 2002, Gorley started his own consulting firm and worked with a wide variety of industries, communities and governments throughout the province, nationally and internationally, on natural resource and management matters. From 2004 until 2007, he served as president of the McGregor Model Forest and was a founding director of the Canadian Model Forest Network. He is a past member of the BC Forest Appeals Commission and Environmental Board and was chair of the Forest Practices Board from 2010 until 2013.

    In 2019, Gorley was appointed to co-chair a strategic review of how old growth forests are managed in B.C., resulting in the 2020 report A New Future for Old Forests. Now retired, he continues to encourage management approaches that will support community and economic well-being within the envelope of ecosystem sustainability.

    Laurie Kremsater, professional forester, biologist, researcher and educator

    Laurie Kremsater is a professional forester and a professional biologist with more than 35 years experience in forest ecology and wildlife resource management. She completed her bachelor of science in forestry with honours and her master of science in forest wildlife ecology at UBC (1989).

    She was a member of the Clayoquot Sound Scientific Panel, was part of the 1990s Old Growth Strategy and part of the team that directed Weyerhaeuser’s Forest Strategy – the most extensive research, adaptive management and monitoring work in B.C. concerning sustaining biodiversity during forest management. Her initial research concerned black-tailed deer ecology and forest birds, then her work expanded to include small mammals, amphibians, species at risk and biodiversity more broadly. Her work now focuses on managing ecosystems as a whole, helping to develop sustainable forest management plans that maintain biological diversity. She designs landscape reserves for the Great Bear Rainforest Order area and trains others to undertake that task. She is helping incorporate Ecosystem-Based Management into planning for Sechelt Community Forest and Lakes Forest Landscape Plan.

    Educating and developing training materials are passions, all aimed at sustaining biodiversity, while maintaining sustainable economic timber opportunity. Kremsater works for academia, government, industry and non-government organizations. After many years as a research associate at UBC, she became an independent consultant, then joined Madrone Environmental for a period, and now once again is consulting on her own, trying, not so successfully yet, to slow down.

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Tuberville Joins 51 Republicans in Calling for Dismantlement of Iran’s Nuclear Program

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Alabama Tommy Tuberville
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) joined U.S. Senator Pete Ricketts (R-NE) and 50 Republican colleagues in sending a letter to President Trump regarding the administration’s ongoing negotiations with Iran. The letter calls on the Trump administration to secure a deal that results in the full dismantlement of the Iranian nuclear program, including permanently ending the regime’s capacity to enrich uranium.
    Sen. Tuberville has spoken numerous times in support of President Trump’s policy approach toward Iran.
    “We write to express our strong support for your efforts to secure a deal with Iran that dismantles its nuclear program, and to reinforce the explicit warnings that you and officials in your administration have issued that the regime must permanently give up any capacity for enrichment,” wrote the Senators.
    “We cannot afford another agreement that enables Iran to play for time, as the JCPOA did. The Iranian regime should know that the administration has Congressional backing to ensure their ability to enrich uranium is permanently eliminated. As always we stand ready to provide you and your administration whatever resources you need to advance American national security interests,” the Senators continued.
    Joining Sens. Tuberville and Ricketts are Sens. Jim Banks (R-IN), John Barrasso (R-WY), Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), John Boozman (R-AR), Katie Britt (R-AL), Ted Budd (R-NC), Bill Cassidy (R-LA), Shelly Moore Capito (R-WV), Susan Collins (R-ME), Kevin Cramer (R-ND), Mike Crapo (R-ID), John Cornyn (R-TX), Tom Cotton (R-AR), Ted Cruz (R-TX), John Curtis (R-UT), Steve Daines (R-MT), Joni Ernst (R-IA), Deb Fischer (R-NE), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Bill Hagerty (R-TN), Josh Hawley (R-MO), John Hoeven (R-ND), Jon Husted (R-OH), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-MS), Ron Johnson (R-WI), Jim Justice (R-WV), John Kennedy (R-LA), James Lankford (R-OK), Mike Lee (R-UT), Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), Roger Marshall (R-KS), Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Dave McCormick (R-PA), Ashley Moody (R-FL), Jerry Moran (R-KS), Bernie Moreno (R-OH), Markwayne Mullin (R-OK), Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Jim Risch (R-ID), Mike Rounds (R-SD), Eric Schmitt (R-MO), Rick Scott (R-FL), Tim Scott (R-SC), Tim Sheehy (R-MT), Dan Sullivan (R-AK), Thom Tillis (R-NC), John Thune (R-SD), Roger Wicker (R-MS), and Todd Young (R-IN) in signing the letter.
    Read the full letter below or here. 
    “Dear Mr. Trump:
    We write to express our strong support for your efforts to secure a deal with Iran that dismantles its nuclear program, and to reinforce the explicit warnings that you and officials in your administration have issued that the regime must permanently give up any capacity for enrichment.
    During your first term you withdrew the United States from the deeply broken Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) and imposed maximum pressure on the regime. As you said then, a fatal flaw of the deal was that it ‘allowed Iran to continue enriching uranium and, over time, reach the brink of a nuclear breakout.’  The JCPOA allowed Iran to sell oil, provided waivers allowing third countries to help Iran build out its nuclear program, and included the termination of United Nations sanctions on the regime. Despite critics claiming your withdrawal from the deal would allow Iran to advance its nuclear ambitions, the Iranian regime remained deterred from making substantial nuclear progress throughout your term because of your maximum pressure campaign.
    Tragically, the Biden administration systematically undid that pressure, functionally re-implementing the nuclear deal. They immediately rescinded your decision to reimpose U.N. sanctions, allowed Iran to sell oil at JCPOA-levels, and even re-issued waivers allowing Iran to build out its nuclear program. As you predicted, those policies indeed allowed Iran to reach the brink of nuclear breakout, which is where they are today. The Biden administration made those concessions without any reciprocal concessions from Iran, and Iran even ceased providing international inspectors access to significant parts of its nuclear program in the early days of the Biden administration.
    The scope and breadth of Iran’s nuclear buildout have made it impossible to verify any new deal that allows Iran to continue enriching uranium. In its most recent report, published on February 26, the International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed that because of Iran’s activities over the last four years, ‘the Agency has lost continuity of knowledge in relation to the production and current inventory of centrifuges, rotors and bellows, heavy water and UOC, which it will not be possible to restore.’
    You and your administration have therefore correctly drawn a redline against any deal that allows Iran to retain any enrichment capability. Your National Security Presidential Memorandum on Iran stated that “Iran’s nuclear program, including its enrichment- and reprocessing-related capabilities and nuclear-capable missiles, poses an existential danger to the United States and the entire civilized world,” and you recently said that only ‘full dismantlement’ of those capabilities would be acceptable. Special Presidential Envoy Steve Witkoff has made it clear in that context of negotiation that for any final arrangement to work, “Iran must stop and eliminate its nuclear enrichment and weaponization program.” 
    We cannot afford another agreement that enables Iran to play for time, as the JCPOA did. The Iranian regime should know that the administration has Congressional backing to ensure their ability to enrich uranium is permanently eliminated. 
    As always we stand ready to provide you and your administration whatever resources you need to advance American national security interests.
    Sincerely,”
    Senator Tommy Tuberville represents Alabama in the United States Senate and is a member of the Senate Armed Services, Agriculture, Veterans’ Affairs, HELP and Aging Committees.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: ICYMI: To Combat Race Discrimination, Energy Department Terminates Funding for Harvard University

    Source: US Department of Energy

    In case you missed it, the Department of Energy issued a notice to Harvard University this week terminating approximately $89 million in grant funding from DOE’s Office of Science and Advanced Research Projects Agency – Energy due to the University’s policy of racial discrimination. This cancellation from DOE resulted in an immediate savings of $7 million to the American taxpayer and was issued in coordination with the Joint Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism’s letter to Harvard University announcing the termination of $450 million in grants from eight government agencies in addition to $2.2 billion that was previously frozen by the Trump Administration.

    Excerpts of DOE’s letters to Harvard President Dr. Alan Garber are below:

    DOE understands that Harvard University (Harvard) continues to engage in race discrimination, including in its admission process, and in other areas of student life, such as access to the Law Review at Harvard Law School. We are also aware of recent events at Harvard involving antisemitic action that suggest the institution has a disturbing lack of concern for the safety and wellbeing of Jewish students. Harvard’s ongoing inaction in the face of repeated and severe harassment and targeting of Jewish students has ground day-to-day campus operations to a halt, deprived Jewish students of learning and research opportunities to which they are entitled, and brought shame upon the University and our nation as a whole.

    Indeed, as the Harvard Presidential Task Force on Combating Antisemitism and Anti-Israeli Bias concluded, actions at Harvard during the 2023-2024 academic year resulted in widespread abuse of Jewish and Israeli students by an institution “that mainstreamed and normalized what many Jewish and Israeli students experience as antisemitism and anti-Israeli bias.”

    DOE maintains a firm policy of not supporting entities, individuals or actions that engage in discrimination or which promote and condone, by action or acquiescence, antisemitism. Despite being aware of deeply rooted racial discrimination and antisemitism at Harvard, Harvard has refused to take immediate, definitive and appropriate remedial action.

    Therefore, based on the available information, DOE has concluded that no modification of the Harvard projects could align the projects with agency priorities and any continued funding of the projects is inconsistent with DOE’s stewardship of American taxpayer funds and would be inconsistent with the DOE’s overall mission and goals.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Two Men Sentenced for Real Estate and Tax Fraud

    Source: US Justice – Antitrust Division

    Headline: Two Men Sentenced for Real Estate and Tax Fraud

    Two men were sentenced to prison for a wire and tax fraud scheme to obtain title to a $1.3 million home in Roanoke County, Virginia. Herman Estes Jr. of Fieldale Virginia was sentenced to 84 months in prison; his co-conspirator Daniel Heggins of Charlotte, North Carolina was sentenced to 24 months in prison.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Former West Virginia Supervisory Correctional Officer Sentenced to more than 17 Years in Prison on Conspiracy and Obstruction Charges

    Source: US Justice – Antitrust Division

    Headline: Former West Virginia Supervisory Correctional Officer Sentenced to more than 17 Years in Prison on Conspiracy and Obstruction Charges

    Chad Lester, a former Lieutenant at the Southern Regional Jail in Beaver, West Virginia, was sentenced today for his role in covering up an assault by correctional officers that resulted in the death of inmate Quantez Burks on March 1, 2022. Lester, 35, of Odd, WV, was sentenced to 210 months in prison.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Justice Department Seeks to Shut Down Chicago-Area Tax Preparer for Allegedly Fabricating Credits, Expenses, and Deductions on Customer Returns

    Source: US Justice – Antitrust Division

    Headline: Justice Department Seeks to Shut Down Chicago-Area Tax Preparer for Allegedly Fabricating Credits, Expenses, and Deductions on Customer Returns

    The Justice Department filed a complaint in a federal court in Chicago seeking to permanently bar tax preparer Stacy Thomas, of Orland Park, Illinois, individually and doing business as Rapid Tax Refunds LLC, Rapid Tax Refund Profs LLC, and Rapid Refunds Income Tax Service Inc., from preparing federal tax returns for others.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Leader of Prolific Guatemalan Drug Trafficking Organization and Guatemalan Politician Who Supplied Tons of Cocaine to the Sinaloa Cartel Presented in U.S. District Court

    Source: US Justice – Antitrust Division

    Headline: Leader of Prolific Guatemalan Drug Trafficking Organization and Guatemalan Politician Who Supplied Tons of Cocaine to the Sinaloa Cartel Presented in U.S. District Court

    Today, Freddy Arnoldo Salazar Flores of Guatemala, a representative of the Central American Parliament, made his initial appearance in federal court in the District of Columbia. Salazar Flores voluntarily returned from abroad to the United States on May 14, 2025.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 16, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Taskforce launched to enhance police response to people smuggling

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Taskforce launched to enhance police response to people smuggling

    A new dedicated taskforce has been launched to transform the way in which the police respond to organised immigration crime gangs operating from the UK.

    Deputy Chief Constable Wendy Gunney

    A new dedicated taskforce has been launched to transform the way in which the police respond to organised immigration crime gangs operating from the UK, facilitating people-smuggling across the Channel.   

    The Organised Immigration Crime Domestic Taskforce will be led by Deputy Chief Constable, Wendy Gunney, who is the National Lead for Serious Organised Crime at the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC).  

    Wendy will be supported by a full-time, dedicated assistant chief constable, and will report progress on a regular basis to the Border Security Commander, Martin Hewitt, and the Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper.  

    The taskforce will be responsible for delivering progress on recent recommendations made by His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS), following an inspection of the approach to tackling organised immigration crime across the UK.  

    The inspection, commissioned in January 2024 by the then Home Secretary, looked at police force performance in relation to organised immigration crime between January 2024 and July 2024. It found that while progress has been made, more must be done, with HMICFRS setting out 10 key recommendations, including the need for more effective action against smuggling gangs based in the UK.  

    This new approach will ensure all police forces work alongside the National Crime Agency, Immigration Enforcement and Border Force to treat this crime type as a priority. 

    In practice, this will mean better information-sharing and more co-ordinated tasking, ensuring UK policing is able to use every tool at its disposal to prevent organised criminal networks from undermining UK immigration law, and working to identify and dismantle any smuggling gangs operating from a UK base.    

    Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper, said:  

    This new specialist taskforce directly responds to recommendations made by His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services and marks a significant step in our Plan for Change to secure Britain’s borders. By bringing together expertise under Deputy Chief Constable Wendy Gunney’s leadership and working closely with Martin Hewitt, we are ensuring a co-ordinated, nationwide approach that will put this vital issue at the forefront of policing priorities.

    This taskforce reflects our commitment to giving law enforcement the tools they need to dismantle criminal networks that undermine our immigration system and put lives at risk. Police forces and regional organised crime units across the UK need to rapidly gear up the response to organised immigration crime, and smuggling and trafficking gangs.  Already we have set up the Border Security Command, and the National Crime Agency has substantially increased its operations and intelligence gathering work with other countries.

    These gangs undermine border security and put lives at risk. We need every possible tool to stop them and put dangerous criminals behind bars.

    Deputy Chief Constable, Wendy Gunney, said:   

    The Organised Immigration Crime Domestic Taskforce will enable our well-established partnerships with other law enforcement agencies to create a multi-agency, national response in tackling organised immigration crime.  

    The taskforce will build on existing work driven by the NPCC’s modern slavery and organised immigration crime programme, which supports local force operational activity and intelligence collection linked to the wider organised immigration crime threat.  

    By working this way, we will accelerate intelligence and information sharing, ensuring organised immigration crime is disrupted robustly and effectively.

    Border Security Commander, Martin Hewitt, said:  

    Wendy’s wealth of experience and knowledge on serious and organised crime is a vital asset in our fight to tackle border security threats, and I am delighted she has agreed to lead this taskforce.   

    This is a key part of my whole-system approach to securing our borders, because it puts tackling immigration crime at the forefront of policing priorities.   

    Police forces across the UK are already very committed to this issue, and while immigration-related arrests and charges have increased, we know there is more to do. So, this is about optimising that collective effort to deliver a properly functioning immigration system, and a safe and secure border.

    This latest step comes as Prime Minister Keir Starmer continues his visit in Tirana today, to step up co-operation on migration and expand successful joint initiatives with Albania to more countries in the region.   

    It also follows the Prime Minister unveiling of the government’s immigration white paper earlier this week, a comprehensive plan that will bring net migration to the UK down significantly, and restore fairness in our immigration system.

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    Updates to this page

    Published 15 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    May 16, 2025
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