Category: Latin America

  • MIL-OSI Security: Global partnerships drive justice results, says Eurojust’s Annual Report 2024

    Source: Eurojust

    Over the past five years, Eurojust’s case workload has increased by more than 60%. In 2024 alone, the Agency handled nearly 13 000 cross-border crime cases. This reflects the unprecedented pace at which organised crime in Europe is evolving, as well as national authorities’ reliance on Eurojust to support complex international investigations.

    Eurojust President, Michael Schmid, commented: With a consistently high number of cases in recent years, our need for close cooperation with prosecutors and judges – both within Europe and beyond – is greater than ever. Thanks to our expanded global partnerships in 2024, we can ensure that criminals are held accountable and citizens are kept safe.

    To further strengthen the fight against organised crime, Eurojust launched the European Judicial Organised Crime Network (EJOCN) in September 2024. This expert hub goes beyond investigation-based collaboration and combats organised crime strategically. Even closer cooperation and direct dialogue between judicial authorities will help to resolve legal challenges and align judicial strategies when investigating and prosecuting organised crime.

    The EJOCN’s first priority is combating drug-related organised crime connected to European ports – key transit points for cocaine and other narcotics destined for the EU. Drug trafficking has been identified as the leading criminal activity in Europe, involving 50% of all criminal networks. The supply of illicit drugs continues to rise, as does the associated violence, making drug trafficking one of the most dangerous and lucrative crimes in the EU.

    Successfully tackling the rise in drug trafficking requires close cooperation with judicial authorities in Latin America, where most narcotics smuggled into Europe originate. In 2024, Eurojust took a significant step in enhancing ties with Latin American partners by signing six Working Arrangements with the Prosecution Services of Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Panama and Peru. These agreements will strengthen cooperation in key areas such as drug and arms trafficking, human trafficking, money laundering and cybercrime.

    Over the past three years, the number of Eurojust supported joint investigation teams involving Latin American countries has steadily increased, with Brazil participating in the highest number. In 2024, Latin American countries participated in three times as many coordination meetings on organised crime and drug trafficking cases as in 2023.

    In addition to its Latin American partnerships, Eurojust works with a broad range of third countries to ensure that national borders do not hinder the prosecution of crime or the delivery of justice. The Agency’s recently adopted Strategy on Cooperation with International Partners reinforces Eurojust’s role as a gateway for cross-border judicial cooperation within and beyond the EU.

    In 2024, 1 022 newly opened cases handled by the Agency involved one or more third countries. Eurojust’s international cooperation continues to increase the number of registered cases at the Agency, with 378 new cases owned by third countries opened in 2024 alone. The United Kingdom, followed by Switzerland and Albania, were the non-EU countries involved in the most cases at Eurojust in 2024.

    Third countries with the highest participation in Eurojust cases in 2024

    During the year, international agreements on cooperation with Eurojust were signed with Armenia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, while the United Arab Emirates joined as a new member of the Agency’s network of Contact Points. In March 2024, Eurojust welcomed its first Liaison Prosecutor for Iceland, strengthening cooperation with Icelandic judicial authorities. Enhanced collaboration with South Partner and Western Balkan countries was also achieved through the EuroMed Justice and Western Balkans Criminal Justice projects, both supported by Eurojust.

    Eurojust’s expanded global network enabled the Agency to deliver impressive operational outcomes in 2024. It contributed to the arrest of more than 1 200 suspects and the seizure and freezing of criminal assets worth over EUR 1 billion. The Agency also contributed to the seizure of drugs worth almost EUR 20 billion.

    Reflecting the growing scale of the challenge, the criminal investigations handled by Eurojust in 2024 involved more than three times as many victims and almost double the financial damages compared to 2023. Moreover, the Agency supported 25% more joint investigation teams than in the previous year.

    The top three crime types handled by the Agency in 2024 continued to be swindling and fraud, drug trafficking and money laundering. Notably, the number of core international crime cases rose by 40%, while cybercrime cases increased by one-third and intellectual property crime cases by 20%.

    Overview of Eurojust-referred cases by crime type in 2024

    Eurojust continued to support national authorities through the organisation of 640 international coordination meetings and 32 coordination centres, as well as operational support for 361 joint investigation teams – over half of which were funded by the Agency. Eurojust also assisted with executing judicial cooperation tools such as European Arrest Warrants and European Investigation Orders, helping national authorities bring offenders to justice and deliver real results for victims and communities.

    More information:

    Eurojust Annual Report 2024:

    Key visuals:

    Key cases in 2024:

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Wallet Surpasses 80 Million Users Amid Rising Demand for Self-Custody

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador, May 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget Wallet, the leading non-custodial crypto wallet, has surpassed 80 million users globally, marking a major milestone in its seventh year of operations. The sharp growth reflects a broader shift toward self-custody amid rising demand for mobile-first, multi-functional crypto wallets. As onchain activity continues to accelerate, wallets are emerging as central platforms in the evolving Web3 stack, driven by stablecoin adoption, real-world asset tokenization and regulatory softening.

    Since its founding in 2018, Bitget Wallet has integrated with thousands of dApps and networks, processed over 250 million transactions, and facilitated over $12 billion in cumulative transaction volume. The wallet has evolved from a simple tool into a comprehensive hub for all onchain activities — from trading and earning to spending crypto in daily life. “Our vision has always been to make crypto practical and accessible to everyone,” said Alvin Kan, COO of Bitget Wallet. “We’re building a simple, seamless experience that helps users participate in Web3 on their own terms—from discovering new tokens to making real-world payments.”

    The adoption is being driven by a combination of mobile-first usage patterns, demand for asset sovereignty, and market volatility that is prompting users to seek greater control over their funds. Bitget Wallet’s integrated approach—combining trading, asset management, and payments — has proven especially appealing to retail users navigating fragmented ecosystems. Its growth over the past year has also been fueled by a surge in onchain trading activity, alongside the launch of new payment features and global incentive campaigns. A series of product upgrades have helped users seize fast-moving opportunities, while simplified interfaces to attract new users across both emerging and developed markets.

    Recent upgrades have further positioned Bitget Wallet as a central gateway for onchain engagement. The launch of Super DEX, a next-generation aggregator spanning over 130 chains, improves trade execution by tapping into deeper liquidity across networks. Bitget Wallet Alpha has emerged as a go-to mobile dashboard for real-time token signals and early-stage trading, helping users act quickly on emerging opportunities. On the payment front, the rollout of Shop with Crypto and PayFi integrations allows users to spend assets directly from their wallets, closing the gap between onchain value and everyday use. With growing activity, the wallet has also introduced enhanced security features, including default MEV protection and EIP-7702 detection tools, to ensure safer interactions at scale.

    Now in its seventh year, Bitget Wallet is marking the milestone with a global campaign spotlighting its evolution into a more intuitive and widely used self-custody platform. The company will host community meetups in key regions, stream leadership sessions, and release a year-in-review to deepen engagement and expand its global presence.

    For more information, visit the Bitget Wallet blog.

    About Bitget Wallet
    Bitget Wallet is a non-custodial crypto wallet designed to make crypto simple and secure for everyone. With over 80 million users, it brings together a full suite of crypto services, including swaps, market insights, staking, rewards, DApp exploration, and payment solutions. Supporting 130+ blockchains and millions of tokens, Bitget Wallet enables seamless multi-chain trading across hundreds of DEXs and cross-chain bridges. Backed by a $300+ million user protection fund, it ensures the highest level of security for users’ assets.

    For more information, visit: X | Telegram | Instagram | YouTube | LinkedIn | TikTok | Discord | Facebook

    For media inquiries, please contact media.web3@bitget.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/e407704f-ebae-436e-b5b9-2a90fa66be37

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Cities Unite for Data-Driven Urban Resilience: UNDRR & WCCD Host Workshops in Vaughan, Canada, and Ajman, United Arab Emirates

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    Cities around the world have a tremendous opportunity to enhance their urban resilience by leveraging standardized, reliable data. Such data is crucial for evidence-based, needs-driven planning and for attracting investment in disaster risk reduction and sustainable development. By utilizing consistent and verifiable data, cities can present compelling cases to investors, securing the necessary funding for critical infrastructure projects. This approach not only improves immediate disaster preparedness but also supports long-term urban planning and sustainability efforts.

    Recognizing this potential, the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) and World Council on City Data (WCCD) jointly hosted workshops in Vaughan, Canada, and Ajman, United Arab Emirates. The central theme, “Data for Resilient Cities,” emphasized the importance of standardized, third-party verified city data in fostering collaboration between local governments and the financial sector. This data is essential for strategic planning and mitigating risks through resilient infrastructure investments.

    The workshops, held on 24-25 April in Vaughan welcomed cities primarily from the Americas and Europe—including Toronto, Vaughan, Mississauga, the Regional Municipality of York (Canada), Reykjavik (Iceland), Montevideo (Uruguay), Buenos Aires (Argentina), and Montego Bay (Jamaica)— while the Ajman session on 6-7 May convened participants from Africa, the Middle East, and Asia, including Al Madinah (Saudi Arabia), Makati City (Philippines), Windhoek (Namibia), Kisumu (Kenya), Minna (Nigeria), Banjul (The Gambia), Ajman (UAE), and Doha (Qatar). These cities engaged in fruitful exchanges of experience on the use of data, ISO certification, and urban resilience strategies and planning—demonstrating the power of peer learning and global cooperation in advancing resilient urban development.

    Participants were introduced to ISO 37123—Indicators for Resilient Cities and ISO 37125—Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) for Cities. These standards provide a robust framework for cities to align their resilience planning with private sector financing, ensuring informed investment decisions based on reliable ESG metrics.

    Hosted by Vaughan and Ajman—the world first ISO37123 certified cities, the workshops focused on two main areas: strategic planning and resilience data, and financing resilient infrastructure. The session highlighted the importance of data in the implementation of ISO 37123, emphasizing the role of certified resilience data in risk reduction planning, disaster recovery, and urban governance. Peer-to-peer exchanges allowed cities to share lessons learned and discuss resilience challenges and solutions. Additionally, the introduction of ISO 37125 explored how ESG metrics can unlock capital markets. Sustainable finance leaders engaged in discussions on the role of certified city data in supporting municipal bonds, green bonds, and other sustainable investment vehicles.

    Participants left the workshops with a comprehensive understanding of how ISO-certified data can be applied to strengthen disaster risk reduction and capital planning, and how data insights help align local resilience goals with global finance frameworks.

    These workshops were part of the UN-led Making Cities Resilient 2030 (MCR2030) initiative and support the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction and UN Sustainable Development Goals. They mark pivotal moments where cities and the financial sector unite around standardized, verified data to drive resilient investment.

    “We are bringing cities and banks into the same room to address two critical challenges—cities need funding, and investors need data. These workshops equip both with the tools to take meaningful, collaborative action.”

    – Dr. Patricia McCarney, President and CEO of WCCD

    “With disasters accelerating and urban services under increasing pressure, these workshops mark pivotal moments—where cities and the financial sector unite around standardized, verified data to drive resilient investment.”

    – Sanjaya Bhatia, Head of Global Education and Training Institute, UNDRR

    The success of the Vaughan and Ajman workshops sets the stage for future sessions aimed at empowering cities to not just recover but lead in resilience planning and sustainable development.

    MCR2030 is a United Nations-led global partnership that has mobilized more than 1,800 local governments from 93 countries and territories, representing 597 million people, committed to strengthening their disaster and climate resilience.  The workshops highlighted the role of MCR2030 Core Partners —UNDRR and WCCD—in leveraging the technical expertise and global networks of both organizations to guide cities in applying standardized data for risk-informed planning, investment, and governance. The events also underscored the importance of city-to-city learning and exchange in fostering collaboration and network among cities on disaster risk reduction and climate resilience.
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI: New Casino Sites UK – Aztec Paradise Picked as The Newest

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN JOSÉ, Costa Rica, May 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The online gambling world is constantly evolving, and every year new casino sites are launched in the UK. These new platforms often come with fresh ideas, innovative features, and enticing bonuses to attract players.

    As an online player, it can sometimes be overwhelming to navigate through the sea of new casinos, all claiming to offer the best gaming experience. But what if we told you that Aztec Paradise, a relatively new entry in the online casino market, has quickly earned its place as one of the most exciting, trustworthy, and rewarding casinos of the year?

    Aztec Paradise: The Newest and Most Exciting Casino Site

    PLAY AT THE NEWEST CASINO UK: AZTEC PARADISE

    Among the vast array of new casino sites in the UK, Aztec Paradise stands out as one of the most thrilling newcomers. Launched in 2023, Aztec Paradise has quickly risen to the top, with its dynamic blend of innovative gaming, user-focused features, and solid reputation for fairness. Here’s why Aztec Paradise has been chosen as the best new casino site of the year.

    1. Unique and Engaging Theme

    One of the first things you’ll notice when visiting Aztec Paradise is its captivating Aztec theme, which transports players to an ancient world of treasures, hidden temples, and exotic jungles. The graphics, animations, and sound effects immerse you in a visually stunning environment, creating a rich, adventure-like atmosphere. This is more than just a casino – it’s an experience. The theme sets it apart from other casinos, making it an ideal choice for players who enjoy a bit of flair with their gambling.

    • Aesthetic Appeal: With beautifully crafted visuals and an engaging design, the casino is visually pleasing while still being easy to navigate.
    • Interactive Features: Aztec Paradise integrates elements of storytelling into its platform, with quests, rewards, and unique challenges that players can engage with.

    2. Comprehensive Game Library

    Aztec Paradise understands that a diverse and engaging game library is key to attracting players, and they’ve delivered just that. Whether you’re a fan of classic slots, live casino games, or cutting-edge table games, Aztec Paradise has something for everyone. The casino features games from some of the top software providers in the industry, including NetEnt, Microgaming, Evolution Gaming, and Play’n GO.

    • Slots: A vast selection of online slots, including video slots, progressive jackpots, and classic slots. The slots come with exciting features, beautiful graphics, and engaging gameplay.
    • Live Casino: The live casino section offers players the chance to interact with professional dealers in real time, with a variety of games such as blackjack, roulette, baccarat, and poker.
    • Table Games: For players who prefer the classics, Aztec Paradise offers a range of virtual table games, including blackjack, roulette, and poker, available in both single-player and multiplayer formats.
    • Exclusive Games: Aztec Paradise is also home to exclusive, custom-built games inspired by Aztec mythology, giving players an even more unique experience.

    3. Generous Bonuses and Promotions

    Aztec Paradise has made its mark in the UK casino market with an impressive collection of bonuses and promotions designed to attract new players and keep existing ones coming back. Here’s a look at some of the top offers available:

    • Welcome Bonus: New players can take advantage of a massive 100% match bonus on their first deposit, plus 50 free spins on selected slots. This gives players a solid head start and a chance to explore the casino’s vast library.
    • Free Spins: Aztec Paradise offers free spins on select games, giving players more chances to win without risking additional funds.
    • Loyalty Program: Regular players are rewarded through an exciting VIP loyalty program where players can earn comp points that can be redeemed for bonuses, free spins, and other perks.
    • Seasonal Promotions: Aztec Paradise runs seasonal promotions and weekly challenges with cash prizes, free spins, and exclusive bonus codes.

    4. Secure and Flexible Payment Options

    Aztec Paradise understands that players want a variety of secure payment methods to fund their accounts and withdraw winnings. The casino offers a broad range of deposit and withdrawal options, including credit/debit cards, e-wallets like Skrill, Neteller, and PayPal, as well as cryptocurrency options like Bitcoin and Ethereum.

    • Quick Withdrawals: Aztec Paradise offers instant withdrawals for e-wallet payments, ensuring you can access your winnings quickly.
    • No Fees: Deposits and withdrawals are free of charge, and players can enjoy seamless transactions without worrying about hidden fees.
    • Secure Transactions: All transactions are encrypted using SSL technology, ensuring that players’ financial and personal data are kept safe at all times.

    5. Mobile-Friendly Experience

    Aztec Paradise is fully optimized for mobile devices, meaning players can enjoy a seamless gaming experience whether they’re at home or on the go. The mobile platform features the same high-quality games, graphics, and user interface as the desktop version, with no compromises on speed or usability.

    • iOS and Android Compatibility: The casino works perfectly on both iOS and Android devices, allowing players to access their favorite games via their smartphones and tablets.
    • Smooth Navigation: The mobile app or browser-based site is fast, user-friendly, and easy to navigate, ensuring a smooth gambling experience on smaller screens.

    6. UK Licensing and Responsible Gambling

    Aztec Paradise is fully licensed and regulated by the UK Gambling Commission (UKGC), ensuring it adheres to strict standards of fairness, security, and responsible gambling. As a licensed casino, it is required to offer a safe environment for players, with transparent terms and conditions and fair gaming practices.

    • Responsible Gambling Tools: Aztec Paradise offers a range of responsible gambling tools, including deposit limits, self-exclusion, and reality checks, to help players manage their gambling habits.
    • Support for Problem Gambling: The casino also provides links to organizations such as GamCare and GambleAware, offering resources for players who may need assistance.

    7. Customer Support

    Aztec Paradise provides 24/7 customer support to ensure players always have access to help when they need it. Whether you have a question about a bonus, need help with a payment, or have a technical issue, the support team is always available to assist you.

    • Live Chat: For instant support, players can use the live chat feature, which connects them with a friendly and knowledgeable agent in real-time.
    • Email Support: For less urgent inquiries, players can contact support via email, and they’ll receive a prompt response.

    In this article, we will dive deep into the world of new casino sites in the UK, highlighting Aztec Paradise as the most noteworthy newcomer. We will explore why it’s gaining so much attention, the advantages it offers, and what makes it stand out in a crowded market. Additionally, we’ll look at the key factors you should consider when choosing a new casino site, and why Aztec Paradise ticks all the boxes.

    What Are New Casino Sites in the UK?

    New casino sites in the UK are online gambling platforms that have recently launched or are in the process of establishing themselves in the UK market. These casinos are typically fresh alternatives to established platforms, offering new features, bonus structures, and gaming libraries to attract players who are tired of the same old options. New casinos often aim to stand out by offering unique features, advanced technology, and more rewarding promotions.

    Why Do New Casino Sites Gain Popularity?

    There are a number of reasons why players flock to new online casinos:

    1. Innovative Features: New casinos often introduce exciting, innovative features, whether it’s the latest technology in live casinos, exclusive games, or cutting-edge interfaces.
    2. Attractive Bonuses: To build their player base, new casinos tend to offer generous welcome bonuses, free spins, and promotions that are designed to entice new players.
    3. Fresh Designs and Themes: With new casinos, players often get a chance to experience a fresh look and feel, with user-friendly interfaces, modern designs, and more personalized options.
    4. Improved Customer Experience: Many new casinos focus heavily on improving customer service, offering faster withdrawals, more payment options, and seamless customer support.

    Despite the potential for fresh and exciting experiences, new casino sites come with their own set of challenges. For example, some may still be establishing their reputations or might not yet have the comprehensive licensing and regulatory checks that older casinos have. This is why it’s important for players to do their research and choose a new site that is reliable, trustworthy, and secure.

    Conclusion: Why Aztec Paradise is the Best New Casino Site in the UK

    Aztec Paradise has quickly established itself as the newest and most exciting casino site in the UK, thanks to its engaging theme, extensive game library, generous bonuses, and commitment to player security and responsible gambling. Whether you’re looking for high-quality slots, thrilling live casino games, or exclusive promotions, Aztec Paradise delivers an unforgettable gaming experience for players of all types.

    With its sleek design, fast payouts, and excellent customer support, Aztec Paradise is a must-try for anyone looking for a fresh, innovative online casino experience. It ticks all the boxes for a modern, safe, and exciting casino experience, making it the best new casino site in the UK for 2023.

    If you’re ready to explore new horizons in online gaming, Aztec Paradise is the perfect place to start your adventure!

    Project Name: Aztec Paradise Casino
    Website: https://aztecparadise.com/
    Contact Person: Roger Chambers, rogerc@aztecparadise.com.
    Email ID: sales@aztecparadise.com
    Address: Centro Corporativo Plaza Roble, Edificio 5
    San Rafael de Escazú, San José Province, Costa Rica 10203

    Disclaimer & Affiliate Disclosure

    This article is for general information and promotional purposes only and shouldn’t be taken as legal, financial, or professional advice. While we aim for accuracy, we can’t guarantee everything is up-to-date or complete. Please double-check details before acting. Some links may be affiliate links, meaning we could earn a commission at no extra cost to you, but this doesn’t affect our content or opinions. Online gambling is for adults of legal age (typically 19+) and carries financial risk. Play responsibly and seek help if needed. Brand names mentioned belong to their respective owners. By reading this, you accept full responsibility for how you use the information.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/5fb7240a-a158-43a8-977d-737750c2ac7a

    The MIL Network

  • India and Honduras deepen bilateral ties with inauguration of Honduran Embassy in New Delhi

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    External Affairs Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar on Thursday inaugurated the Embassy of Honduras in New Delhi, calling the event a significant milestone in the growing partnership between the two nations.

    Dr. Jaishankar said that it marked a new chapter in bilateral relations. He also expressed appreciation for Honduras’ strong message of solidarity with India in opposing terrorism in all its forms and manifestations.

    The establishment of the Honduran Embassy is expected to enhance diplomatic engagement, promote economic cooperation, and deepen cultural exchanges between the two countries.

    Tracing the evolution of bilateral ties since the establishment of diplomatic relations on 28 September 1994, Dr. Jaishankar noted that the relationship has grown steadily across political, commercial, developmental, and cultural domains. He highlighted that bilateral trade currently stands at approximately USD 310 million and spans a diverse range of goods, including pharmaceuticals, textiles, automobiles, and machinery. India, in turn, imports coffee, wood, and leather from Honduras.

    Dr. Jaishankar said that Indian businesses were showing increasing interest in the renewable energy and IT-enabled services (ITES) sectors in Honduras. He pointed to the recent Memorandum of Understanding signed between Reliance Jio and Hondutel, Honduras’s national telecom operator, for the rollout of 5G infrastructure. According to him, it represents a “significant step in digital connectivity and technological innovation.”

    He went on to emphasize that the Embassy would serve as a hub for trade promotion, facilitating business-to-business connections and enabling greater institutional support for bilateral initiatives. “We see this as an opportunity to encourage more investment partnerships and to share our developmental experiences,” he added.

    The Minister also mentioned ongoing cooperation under the framework of Global South solidarity. In this context, he announced plans to install an early warning disaster management system in Honduras, developed by India’s Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DOT), to enhance the country’s resilience against natural disasters.

    On the multilateral front, Dr. Jaishankar acknowledged Honduras’s consistent support for India at the United Nations and other international forums. He also noted the positive contribution of the small but vibrant Indian diaspora in Honduras, which he said acts as a “living bridge of friendship” between the two nations. The growing interest in Indian culture, yoga, and wellness practices in Honduras was another encouraging sign of deeper people-to-people ties, he said.

    Reflecting on India’s wider engagement with the Latin American region, Dr. Jaishankar said that when he assumed office six years ago, he had committed to increasing India’s diplomatic and developmental footprint in the region. The opening of the Honduran Embassy in New Delhi, he noted, is a reaffirmation of that promise and a sign that such efforts are bearing fruit.

     

    Finally, the External Affairs Minister extended his warmest congratulations to the Honduran delegation and expressed hope that the newly inaugurated mission would pave the way for more intensive interaction and collaboration between the two countries in the years ahead.

  • MIL-OSI Security: Lackawanna man going to prison for his role in kidnapping conspiracy attempting to force sister to marry in Yemen

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    BUFFALO, N.Y. – U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that Waleed Abughanem, 33, of Lackawanna, NY, who was convicted of misprision of felony, was sentenced to serve 36 months in prison by U.S. District Judge John L. Sinatra, Jr.

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys Charles M. Kruly and Maeve E. Huggins, who handled the case, stated that Abughanem is the son of Khaled Abughanem and the brother of Adham Abughanem. On September 8, 2021, Khaled and Adham Abughanem flew from Buffalo, NY, to Guadalajara, Mexico to kidnap Victim 1, who is the daughter of Khaled and the sister of Adham and Waleed. Between September 10, 2021, and April 6, 2023, Waleed, Khaled and Adham Abughanem conspired to transport Victim 1 from the Western District of New York to Cairo, Egypt, and then to Sanaa, Yemen, where they confined Victim 1 for approximately 16 months with the purpose of marrying her to a man not of her choosing.

    Waleed Abughanem knew Victim 1 was being held involuntarily, and during some of this period, he was present in Yemen. When he was not present in Yemen, Waleed Abughanem instructed his wife to monitor and supervise Victim 1. In December 2022, Waleed Abughanem traveled from Yemen to the United States. When questioned by U.S. Customs and Border Protection as to the whereabouts of his siblings, Waleed Abughanem told the CBP Officer that the Victim was in the United States. By making a false statement, Waleed Abughanem concealed that Victim 1 had been kidnapped and was being involuntarily held in Yemen.

    Khaled and Adham Abughanem were previously convicted by a federal jury at trial and are awaiting sentencing.

    Waleed Abughanem’s sentencing is the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, under the direction of Special Agent-in-Charge Matthew Miraglia, and the U.S. Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service, under the direction of Diplomatic Security Director Carlos Matus and Deputy Assistant Secretary Paul Houston. Additional assistance was provided by the Lackawanna Police Department, under the direction of Chief Mark Packard, Customs and Border Protection, under the direction of Director of Field Operations Rose Brophy, and CPB in Boston, Massachusetts.

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    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Two men arrested, charged with operating large-scale marijuana grow operation in Wayne County, NY

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    BUFFALO, N.Y.-U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that Ferrydoon M. Ardehali, 55, of Staten Island, NY, and Colby Riggle, 37, of California, were arrested and charged by criminal complaint with manufacturing and possessing with intent to distribute 1,000 or more marijuana plants. The charge carries a mandatory minimum penalty of 10 years in prison and a maximum of life.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Donna Duncan, who is handling the case, stated that according to the complaint, in January 2025, the DEA began investigating a large-scale illegal marijuana cultivation operation, under the direction of Ardehali and Riggle, on Daansen Road in Walworth, NY. The investigation revealed that the defendants were selling and distributing marijuana to multiple businesses that are New York State-authorized cannabis grow facilities, including in North Tonawanda and Clarence, NY, under the business name Integrity Farms & Greenhouses, Inc. a records check with the New York State Office of Cannabis Management discovered that neither Integrity Farms & Greenhouses, Inc., nor any other business associated with the operation has been issued a New York State license to grow cannabis or hemp.

    On May 14, 2025, investigators executed a search warrant at the Daansen Road property. The complaint states that it was immediately apparent that marijuana was being grown on a large scale, processed, and packaged within the facility. Investigators seized approximately 29,406 growing marijuana plants, and approximately 3,700 lbs. of processed marijuana.

    The complaint is the result of an investigation by the Drug Enforcement Administration, under the direction of Special Agent-in-Charge Frank Tarentino, New York Field Division, the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, under the direction of Sheriff Robert Milby, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, under the direction of Special Agent-in-Charge Matthew Miraglia, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Enforcement and Removal Operations, under the direction of Acting Field Office Director Steven Kurzdorfer, U.S. Border Patrol, under the direction of Buffalo Station Patrol Agent-in- Charge Martin Coombs, Customs and Border Protection, under the direction of Director of Field Operations Rose Brophy, Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation New York, under the direction of Harry Chavis, the Cattaraugus County Sheriff’s Office, under the direction of Sheriff Eric Butler, the Cuba Police Department, under the direction of Chief Dustin Burch, the Olean Police Department, under the direction of Chief Ron Richardson, and the Salamanca Police Department, under the direction of Chief Jamie Deck.

    The fact that a defendant has been charged with a crime is merely an accusation and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.   

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    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Ecuadorian Drug Trafficker Pleads Guilty

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    SAN DIEGO – Wilder Emilio Sanchez Farfan, aka Gato, an Ecuadorian national and high-level drug trafficker, pleaded guilty in federal court today to international drug trafficking charges following his extradition to San Diego January 26, 2024.

    Farfan had previously been designated by the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 14059 for materially contributing to the illicit activities of major Mexican cartels to traffic cocaine into the United States.

    Farfan pleaded guilty to a second superseding indictment returned by a federal frand jury on October 30, 2019. In his plea agreement, Farfan admitted that he led an extensive drug trafficking organization that distributed over 450 kilograms of cocaine in Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico and elsewhere, and that the cocaine was ultimately imported into and distributed within the United States. He also admitted that the organization bribed government officials and used firearms to further their drug trafficking activities.

    As part of his plea, Farfan also agreed to forfeit over $899,000 of U.S. currency.

    Farfan is scheduled to be sentenced before U.S. District Judge Linda Lopez on August 11, 2025, at 10 a.m.

    This prosecution is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) Strike Force Initiative, which provides for the establishment of permanent multi-agency task force teams that work side-by-side in the same location. This co-located model enables agents from different agencies to collaborate on intelligence-driven, multi-jurisdictional operations to disrupt and dismantle the most significant drug traffickers, money launderers, gangs, and transnational criminal organizations.

    This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kyle B. Martin and Ashley E. Goff.

    DEFENDANTS                                             Case Number 19CR1610-01-LL                             

    Wilder Emilio Sanchez Farfan, aka Gato                   Age: 44                               Ecuador

    SUMMARY OF CHARGES

    International Conspiracy to Distribute Cocaine – Title 21, U.S.C., Sections 959, 960, and 963

    Maximum penalty: Mandatory minimum 10 years and up to life in prison

    INVESTIGATING AGENCIES

    Drug Enforcement Administration

    Federal Bureau of Investigation

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: Young people are concerned they lack the green skills to effectively act on climate change

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Capgemini Press contact: 
    Sereydana Oum
    Tel.: +33 6 61 42 03 59 
    Email: sereydana.oum@capgemini.com

    UNICEF Press contact:
    Anupama Saikia
    E-mail: ansaikia@unicef.org

    Young people are concerned they lack the green skills
    to effectively act on climate change

    Six in ten 16–24-year-olds globally agree that developing green skills could open up new career opportunities but less than half (44%) possess the skills required for today’s green workforce

    Paris, May 16, 2025 – The Capgemini Research Institute and UNICEF* Generation Unlimited’s report, Youth perspectives on climate: Preparing for a sustainable future’ published today, explores youth perspectives on the climate crisis. It includes their take on “green skilling” and graduating to a green job, as well as how business and government can collaborate with young people to inspire climate advocacy. The report finds that despite rising climate anxiety, a majority of young people remain hopeful that there is still time to address and fix the problems caused by climate change. Young people in both, the Global South and Global North, want to be a part of the solution, with most interested in shaping environmental policy and many interested in pursuing a green job, however the report highlights a worrying lack of requisite green skills.

    According to the research, most young people worry about climate change. Over two-thirds of youth globally say they are concerned about how climate change could affect their future, representing an increase since 2023, when a UNICEF USA survey found that 57% of youth globally experienced “eco-anxiety.”1 Youth in the Global North report higher levels of climate-related anxiety (76%) compared to their peers in the Global South (65%). A rural-urban divide is also evident, with 72% of youth living in urban and suburban areas expressing concern about climate change impacts on their future, versus 58% in rural areas.

    Young people believe there is still time to fix the problems caused by climate change
    Despite their climate anxiety, most youths believe green skills are key to a brighter future, with 61% agreeing that developing green skills2 will offer them new career opportunities. They are interested in aligning their paid employment with their climate conscious values, with slightly over half (53%) globally and almost two-thirds (64%) in the Global North interested in a green job.

    “Young people across the globe, and in particular in the US, are hyperaware of the urgent challenges posed by climate change. It’s clear that they are also eager to be part of the solution,” said Sarika Naik, Group Chief Corporate Responsibility Officer at Capgemini. “We need to help young people turn their passion into impact by investing in green skills. This report shows how critical it is that business, governments, and education leaders work together to bridge the skills gap, empower youth voices, and create pathways to meaningful green careers.”

    “Young people are architecting climate solutions. They are designing and deploying innovative solutions that respond to the climate realities their communities are facing,” said Dr. Kevin Frey, CEO, Generation Unlimited at UNICEF. “Green Rising, with its ecosystem of public and private sector partners, is supporting young people with the skills and opportunities they need to take climate action, start green companies, access green jobs and power green solutions.”

    Youth lack the necessary green skills
    Young people provide a workforce pipeline for tackling climate change, but the green transition requires a skilled workforce. According to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), environmental sustainability competency relies on a strong foundation in science, an understanding of climate change, a commitment to protect the environment, the confidence to explain environmental issues, and the motivation to act sustainably3.

    However, the report finds that less than half of youth globally (44%) believe they have the green skills necessary to be successful in today’s workforce. In terms of green skills, young people in rural areas lag even further behind young people in suburban and urban areas. This percentage also differs across regions. In the Global South, around six in ten Brazilian youth say they are equipped with green skills, while only 5% of Ethiopian youth say the same.

    Since the Capgemini Research Institute’s 2023 research4, youth in several countries in the Global North have regressed in their knowledge of green skills. Among youth aged 16 to 18 in Australia, France, Germany, Japan, the UK, and the US, recycling and waste reduction remains the most commonly held green skill. But the share of youth knowledgeable about sustainable design, sustainable energy, and sustainable transportation has significantly declined since 2023. In the Global South, young people are most knowledgeable about recycling and waste reduction, energy conservation and water conservation, but least knowledgeable about climate technologies, data analysis, and sustainable design.

    The generational divide must be overcome to find solutions
    Most youth globally (71%) agree that they should have a strong influence on environmental policy and legislation. However, the majority agree that business and political leaders are not playing their part and should be contributing more to the fight against climate change. While almost two-thirds of young people feel engaged enough to want to speak with local leaders about climate action, fewer than half believe their opinions are actually heard by community leaders.

    The report urges community leaders to support young people in advancing climate solutions and green skills. According to the report, integrating green education, expanding access to training, and aligning climate goals with youth employment strategies should be part of the solution and implanted by policymakers. Whereas corporate leaders could be encouraged to co-create green job pathways, invest in youth-led initiatives, and embed young voices in CSR, ESG, and climate strategies in order to build trust and drive sustainable innovation.

    As young people seek to upskill, global movements like Green Rising aim to support 20 million young people by 2026 in taking grassroots action, offering opportunities for volunteerism, advocacy, paid work and entrepreneurship. This initiative is led by Generation Unlimited at UNICEF and supported by the public and private sector, including Capgemini.

    To read the full report: https://www.capgemini.com/insights/research-library/global-youth-and-sustainability

    Report Methodology
    The Capgemini Research Institute carried out extensive research into youth perspectives on climate change and interest in green skills and green jobs in February and March 2025. They conducted an online survey of 5,100 youth aged 16 to 24 across 21 countries in Africa, the Americas, Asia-Pacific, and Europe. This included 4,394 youth aged 18 to 24 and 706 youth aged 16 and 17 years old. For the 14% of the sample that were minors (<18 years old), they obtained parental permission from 706 parents. The majority (83%) of the youth surveyed live in the Global South (low- and middle-income countries).5 The remaining youth respondents live in the Global North or high-income countries.

    About UNICEF
    UNICEF works in some of the world’s toughest places, to reach the world’s most disadvantaged children. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone.

    About Generation Unlimited
    Launched by the UN Secretary-General at the 2018 UN General Assembly, UNICEF’s Generation Unlimited is a leading global Public-Private-Youth Partnership on a mission to skill and connect the world’s 1.8 billion young people to opportunities for employment, entrepreneurship, and social impact. The partnership brings together global organisations and leaders including Heads of State, CEOs, Heads of UN agencies, and civil society champions with young people to co-create and deliver innovative solutions on a global scale.

    * UNICEF does not endorse any company, brand, product or service

    About Capgemini
    Capgemini is a global business and technology transformation partner, helping organizations to accelerate their dual transition to a digital and sustainable world, while creating tangible impact for enterprises and society. It is a responsible and diverse group of 340,000 team members in more than 50 countries. With its strong over 55-year heritage, Capgemini is trusted by its clients to unlock the value of technology to address the entire breadth of their business needs. It delivers end-to-end services and solutions leveraging strengths from strategy and design to engineering, all fueled by its market leading capabilities in AI, generative AI, cloud and data, combined with its deep industry expertise and partner ecosystem. The Group reported 2024 global revenues of €22.1 billion.
    Get The Future You Want | www.capgemini.com

    About the Capgemini Research Institute
    The Capgemini Research Institute is Capgemini’s in-house think-tank on all things digital. The Institute publishes research on the impact of digital technologies on large traditional businesses. The team draws on the worldwide network of Capgemini experts and works closely with academic and technology partners. The Institute has dedicated research centers in India, Singapore, the United Kingdom and the United States. It was ranked #1 in the world for the quality of its research by independent analysts for six consecutive times – an industry first.

    Visit us at https://www.capgemini.com/researchinstitute/


    1 UNICEF USA, “From eco-anxiety to eco-optimism, listening to a generation of resilient youth,” January 2023.
    2 Green skills refer to the hard and soft skills which help people take care of nature, stop pollution, and use resources wisely.
    3 OECD, Skills Outlook 2023: Skills for a resilient green and digital transition, November 6, 2023.
    4 CRI, Digital skills and technology in secondary education survey, March 2023
    5 Bank Group, Income Group Class, according to 2023 gross national income (GNI) per capita, calculated using the World Bank Atlas method.

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: SPC May 16, 2025 0600 UTC Day 2 Convective Outlook

    Source: US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

    SPC AC 160557

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1257 AM CDT Fri May 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z – 181200Z

    …THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO ARKANSAS AND OVER PARTS OF THE MID-ATLANTIC
    AND NORTHEAST…

    …SUMMARY…
    Severe thunderstorms are possible Saturday across parts of the Mid
    Atlantic and Northeast, and across parts of the southeastern Great
    Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley.

    …Synopsis…
    A mid-level low centered across the western Great Lakes Saturday
    morning will shift east through the day and move over the Northeast
    by 12Z Sunday. Moderate to strong mid-level flow will expand south
    from the southern Great Lakes to the Southeast. Farther west, a
    weakening mid-level shortwave trough will advance from northern
    Mexico into the Southern Plains. A mid-level jet streak associated
    with this mid-level shortwave trough will overspread portions of
    central/northern Texas and into Oklahoma on Saturday. A strong
    mid-level jet streak will move into the Intermountain West on
    Saturday and amplify a trough across the western CONUS.

    …Mid Atlantic to the Northeast…
    Thunderstorms will likely be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    across portions of the Upper Ohio Valley and eastern Great Lakes.
    This convection and cloudcover associated with it, casts
    considerable uncertainty on destabilization, particularly across the
    Northeast. However, mid-60s dewpoints are anticipated ahead of the
    cold front as it moves eastward through the day. This moisture,
    combined with cooling temperatures aloft. Could be sufficient for
    damaging wind gusts and perhaps isolated large hail.

    The most favorable zone for severe storms will likely exist across
    eastern North Carolina into southeast Virginia. This zone is far
    enough south to likely remain mostly cloud free which will promote
    surface heating and destabilization. In addition, the stronger
    mid-level flow is forecast to overspread this region which would
    support storm organization and the potential for supercells. Given
    the greater instability and shear with potential for supercell storm
    mode, large hail and damaging wind gusts appear most likely within
    this region.

    …Southeast…
    The cold front will likely become stalled across the Southeast on
    Saturday. South of this front, moderate to strong instability is
    forecast with 50 knots of flow parallel to the boundary. Forcing
    will remain weak along this boundary with minimal surface
    convergence and mostly neutral heights aloft. Therefore, storms are
    possible along this boundary, and could be supercellular if they
    form, but coverage should be isolated if any storms form at all
    given the weak forcing.

    …Central Texas into Oklahoma, Arkansas, and northern Louisiana…
    Moderate to strong instability is forecast across central/northern
    Texas Saturday afternoon as temperatures warm into the low 80s with
    dewpoints in the low 70s and 500mb temperatures around -10C. Weak
    large scale forcing will overspread the dryline during the afternoon
    as a right entrance region of the upper-level jet overspreads
    northern Texas. Any subtle large scale forcing will likely be
    sufficient for rapid storm development along the uncapped
    dryline/triple point in north-central Texas by mid-afternoon. Large
    hail (some 2+ inch) will be the initial threat from supercells along
    the dryline. However, CAM signals suggest a combination of left and
    right-moving supercells congealing into a cluster/MCS rather quickly
    with an increasing severe wind threat. These mode concerns limit
    higher hail/tornado probabilities at this time, despite a very
    unstable and strongly sheared environment across the region.

    Additional supercells may develop Saturday evening and into early
    Sunday morning across eastern Oklahoma into the Ozarks as isentropic
    ascent increases with the strengthening low-level jet. These storms
    will pose a primary threat of large hail.

    …Utah into Southeast Idaho and Southwest Wyoming…
    Rapidly cooling temperatures aloft across the Great Basin on
    Saturday will result in weak destabilization and numerous storms. A
    deep, well-mixed boundary layer will support the potential for
    severe wind gusts from the stronger cores.

    ..Bentley.. 05/16/2025

    CLICK TO GET WUUS02 PTSDY2 PRODUCT

    NOTE: THE NEXT DAY 2 OUTLOOK IS SCHEDULED BY 1730Z

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Messi, Garnacho back for Argentina World Cup qualifiers

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Captain Lionel Messi has returned to Argentina’s squad for World Cup qualifiers against Chile and Colombia, the Argentine football association said on Thursday.

    Argentina’s Lionel Messi tries to maneuver around Australia’s Kye Rowles during a friendly match at Workers’ Stadium on Thursday in Beijing. [Photo/Xinhua]

    The 37-year-old missed the team’s March qualifiers against Uruguay and Brazil due to an adductor injury but has since returned to action for his club Inter Miami.

    Albiceleste manager Lionel Scaloni also recalled Manchester United forward Alejandro Garnacho and Strasbourg left-back Valentin Barco, who were both overlooked for the previous matches.

    But there was no place in the preliminary 28-man squad for Roma forward Paulo Dybala or River Plate defenders Marcos Acuna and German Pezzella.

    Argentina will meet Chile in Santiago on June 5 and Colombia in Buenos Aires five days later.

    The reigning World Cup and Copa America champion currently leads the 10-team South American World Cup qualifying group with 31 points from 14 games.

    The top six teams will earn an automatic spot at football’s showpiece tournament in the United States, Mexico and Canada next year. The seventh-ranked side will advance to an intercontinental playoff.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: WATCH: Padilla Forces Senate Vote Demanding Answers on Trump Administration’s Dealings With El Salvador

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.)

    WATCH: Padilla Forces Senate Vote Demanding Answers on Trump Administration’s Dealings With El Salvador

    WATCH: Padilla emphasizes the threat of Trump’s ignorance of due process for all AmericansWASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Immigration Subcommittee, spoke on the Senate floor to hold the Trump Administration accountable for its wrongful deportations of individuals from the United States to El Salvador. Padilla’s floor remarks came ahead of the Senate vote on privileged legislation he is co-leading to demand answers on the Trump Administration’s failure to comply with court orders as applicable to wrongful deportations to El Salvador and to investigate El Salvador’s human rights abuses.
    The privileged legislation is co-led by U.S. Senators Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.). Republicans rejected the legislation 45-50 in a party-line vote.
    Under Senate rules, the Senators forced a vote on the resolution today that would require the Trump Administration to produce a report detailing any steps the Administration is taking to ensure compliance with court orders applicable to those wrongfully deported by the United States to El Salvador; confirming whether U.S. security assistance has been used to support the illegal detention of individuals from the United States; and assessing El Salvador’s human rights record. If the Administration fails to produce the report, security assistance to El Salvador would be prohibited by federal law.
    Padilla began by highlighting the devastating stories of people and their families who were suddenly and recklessly deported from the United States to El Salvador by the Trump Administration without due process, including over 200 migrants sent to El Salvador’s high-security prison, CECOT, with eight women being mistakenly flown out to the all-male prison and then flown back.
    “All across the country, there were stories of families waking up to learn their loved ones had disappeared. A husband with no criminal record detained after a routine immigration appointment, complying with the conditions of his status at the moment; another instance of a makeup artist who had fled Venezuela after being targeted for his sexual orientation and political views, one day gone, simply for having crown tattoos in honor of his parents; a mother who learned the whereabouts of her son only when she saw his face on propaganda videos released by El Salvador.”
    “Hundreds of men have been sent to prison with no trial even. No sentence. No end date. No communication with the outside world.”
    Padilla criticized Republicans for trying to cast these individuals as “ruthless terrorist gang members,” despite a report from 60 Minutes last month showing that 75 percent of those deported to CECOT had no criminal record. He reiterated the foundational U.S. right to due process under the law and that many of the people deported by the Trump Administration had pending asylum cases or other immigration protection.
    “If you have committed a crime in the United States of America, then yes, you deserve to be prosecuted. But as we all know — and I hope we continue to respect — that we have a justice system to do just that. A justice system that has a process for those charged with a crime to be found guilty or innocent. Because yes, you have to actually be found guilty in a court to be guilty.”
    “That shouldn’t be controversial. Anybody who claims to be for ‘law and order,’ has to be both for ‘law’ and ‘order.’ You can’t just overlook the law part of the slogan. But Republicans continue to leave out that fact and the fact that the overwhelming majority of those deported had no criminal records.”
    “But simply because they may have tattoos, the Trump Administration has decided to use them for a poorly executed and expensive publicity stunt.”
    Padilla warned that President Trump’s dictatorial actions and ignoring of the law pose a threat not only to migrants, but to all Americans.
    “If Republicans allow Donald Trump to make himself judge, jury, and executioner, then we’re all in trouble. This is the behavior of a foreign dictator — not the President of the United States. A dictator who wishes to do away with due process and disappearing loved ones to foreign countries without a trace. Now, this Administration is violating federal law by sending people to places like CECOT and soon, maybe Libya, where they may very well face torture or some other horrific treatment.”
    “And for anybody who thinks that this may not concern them because you’re an American citizen, think again. You may not actually be given an opportunity to prove your citizenship before you’re sent away. Donald Trump has said publicly that he wants to imprison American citizens in El Salvador next. Not my words, his. And so there is no telling where all of this is gonna lead.”
    As the Trump Administration has resisted and defied court orders, Padilla pushed his Republican colleagues to support the resolution he is co-leading to hold the President accountable. He concluded his remarks by emphasizing the historical, high stakes nature of this moment for protecting civil liberties and the basic right to due process in the United States.
    “The resolution before us today would force the Trump Administration to start opening up the books, to tell us what meaningful actions they are taking to comply, to be accountable to the American people, and yes, to demand that the Administration publish a report on the human rights violations being committed by the country that Trump is so willingly embracing. But it also does another thing: it puts us all on the record.”
    “History will judge not only those who willingly embraced the erosion of civil rights that’s happening. But it will also judge those who chose to sit back and watch it happen over and over again.”
    “Every member of this body has to decide whether they will stand up and demand answers from the Administration or to sit silently while Trump imprisons innocent men.”
    “This is about more than immigrants or immigration. This is about due process. This is about civil rights. This is about the foundation of our liberties.”
    Video of Senator Padilla’s remarks is available here.
    Senator Padilla has strongly pushed back against wrongful deportations to El Salvador. Last month, he joined 24 Senators in urging Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) leadership to return Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a father who was living legally in Maryland with his family until the Trump Administration wrongfully deported him without due process to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador. Padilla also joined Senators Van Hollen and Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.) to meet with Abrego Garcia’s family and wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, to discuss the ongoing effort to secure his immediate release. Padilla promised to keep fighting for Abrego Garcia so he can be reunited with his family.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Arias Resource Capital Fund II L.P. and Arias Resource Capital Fund II (Mexico) L.P. Sale of Common Shares of Sierra Metals Inc.

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    For dissemination in Canada and over Canadian news services only

    TORONTO, May 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — On May 14, 2025 Arias Resource Capital Fund II L.P. (“ARCF II”) and Arias Resource Capital Fund II (Mexico) L.P. (“ARCF II Mexico”, and together with ARCF II, the “ARC Funds”) sold a total of 19,538,423 Common Shares of Sierra Metals Inc. (“Sierra”) at a price of USD$0.81 per share for an aggregate consideration of USD$15,826,122.63.

    The ARC Funds ceased to exercise control or direction over, directly or indirectly, more than 10% of the issued and outstanding Common Shares of Sierra.

    This news release has been disseminated in accordance with the early warning requirements of Canadian provincial securities laws.

    For further information or a copy of the related early warning repot, please contact: J. Alberto Arias, Director, phone: 305-913-5400

    The dissemination of this release in the United States or to any United States news service may constitute a violation of U.S. securities laws.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI China: World’s largest car carrier built by China sets sail

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    An aerial drone photo taken on May 15, 2025 shows the naming ceremony of the car carrier Anji Ansheng at Shanghai Haitong International Automotive Terminal in east China’s Shanghai. [Photo/Xinhua]

    SHANGHAI, May 15 — Anji Ansheng, China’s domestically built ocean-going car carrier and the world’s largest such carrier in terms of capacity, set sail on its maiden voyage to Europe on Thursday evening, carrying approximately 7,000 China-made vehicles.

    The departure from Shanghai marks a milestone achievement, surpassing a record set just weeks earlier by BYD Shenzhen, which is a domestically built car carrier from the major Chinese automaker BYD. That vessel had previously held the title of the world’s largest car carrier in operation.

    “The fact that this record has been broken again in less than a month reflects the rapid rise of China’s mid-to-high-end manufacturing sector, and the resilience and vitality of the country’s foreign trade despite complex global conditions,” said Gao Yuning, deputy director of the School of Public Policy and Management at Tsinghua University.

    Anji Ansheng measures 228 meters in length and 37.8 meters in width, with a maximum capacity of carrying 9,500 standard vehicles, said Zhuang Jingxiong, general manager of SAIC Anji Logistics Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of SAIC Motor Corporation Limited.

    The vessel integrates advanced energy-saving technologies and intelligent low-carbon systems, achieving world-class energy efficiency. It is also incorporated with a methanol-refueling design, laying the foundation for achieving carbon neutrality in the future.

    “China’s large-scale construction and delivery of vehicle carriers are propelling the country’s ocean-going auto transport capacity to new heights,” said Zheng Hehui, deputy general manager of China Merchants Industry Holdings, a subsidiary of the China Merchants Group.

    According to SAIC, the company had delivered over 5.5 million vehicles to international markets by the end of 2024, placing it among China’s top car exporters. SAIC’s annual overseas sales have surpassed 1 million units for three consecutive years.

    China’s automobile exports exceeded 6.4 million units in 2024, maintaining the top global position for a second consecutive year, according to the General Administration of Customs of China.

    Data from January to April 2025 shows that the country exported more than 1.93 million vehicles during the period, a year-on-year increase of 6 percent.

    Take the Shanghai Haitong International Automotive Terminal — from where Anji Ansheng set sail — as an example. Despite global trade uncertainties in the first four months this year, the port exported 740,000 vehicles during the period, a year-on-year increase of 25.1 percent.

    “This momentum reflects not only the rising competitiveness of Chinese brands but also the strong capabilities of China’s auto industry,” Cui Dongshu, secretary general of the China Passenger Car Association, said.

    China’s growing competitiveness was also evident at the recent 2025 Shanghai Auto Show, which attracted more than 12,000 overseas dealers.

    “China is doing a great job in terms of technology, and the cars are very reliable. People have confidence in Chinese cars. I think they see Chinese cars as offering a good balance between price and quality,” said Agustin Garcia, CEO of Spain’s Sarmovil Auto Group.

    SAIC’s Anji Logistics now operates one of the world’s leading vehicle shipping fleets. By 2026, its ocean-going fleet will grow to 22 vessels, with routes covering Western Europe, Mexico, Southeast Asia, the Middle East and other key export destinations for Chinese automakers.

    “For automakers, owning a fleet ensures stable export operations, reduces transportation costs, and guarantees timely delivery of products to overseas customers,” said Xie Xiaowen, an expert from the China Communications and Transportation Association.

    MG cars produced by Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp (SAIC) are parked next to the car carrier Anji Ansheng to be shipped in east China’s Shanghai on May 15, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on May 15, 2025 shows the car carrier Anji Ansheng at Shanghai Haitong International Automotive Terminal in east China’s Shanghai. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Cars are driven onto the car carrier Anji Ansheng at Shanghai Haitong International Automotive Terminal in east China’s Shanghai, May 15, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on May 15, 2025 shows the car carrier Anji Ansheng at Shanghai Haitong International Automotive Terminal in east China’s Shanghai. [Photo/Xinhua]
    This photo taken on May 15, 2025 shows the ceremony of the maiden voyage of the car carrier Anji Ansheng at Shanghai Haitong International Automotive Terminal in east China’s Shanghai. [Photo/Xinhua]
    A panoramic aerial drone photo taken on May 15, 2025 shows the car carrier Anji Ansheng at Shanghai Haitong International Automotive Terminal in east China’s Shanghai. [Photo/Xinhua]

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: ITTF chief outlines vision for global table tennis

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Seeking her second term as International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) president, Petra Sorling has outlined her vision for the sport’s development in the coming years, especially after the inclusion of the mixed team event at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympic Games.

    Sorling will vie for the ITTF presidency with Mohamed El Hacen Ahmed Salem and Khalil Al-Mohannadi. Her manifesto outlines the future of table tennis built on three key pillars – sharing the benefits of growth with members and where it matters most; securing the ITTF’s place as a leading International Federation; and shaping the future with strategic investments in table tennis.

    President of International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) Petra Sorling is seen during the kick-off ceremony of the 2022 ITTF World Team Table Tennis Championships Finals in Chengdu, southwest China’s Sichuan Province, Sept. 30, 2022. (Xinhua/Liu Xu)

    As the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Executive Board in April approved the inclusion of the mixed team event for the 2028 Olympics, Sorling is seeking to position table tennis among the top eight sports in the Olympic program, along with those including athletics, football and basketball.

    In an interview with international news agencies on Thursday, the ITTF chief said she had wanted to increase the number of Olympic table tennis events ever since she was president of the Swedish table tennis association.

    “Sweden put forward a proposition in the 2021 [ITTF] AGM to have some kind of mixed [team] world championships, and the congress said this is very interesting and let’s start it,” she recalled.

    “Then I went to my friends in the Chinese Table Tennis Association and discussed it with them, and how this could happen, and it ended up that we created a Mixed Team World Cup.”

    After gaining success in the past two editions of the tournament in Chengdu, the IOC gave the green light for the mixed team event to be included in the Olympic program.

    “We could see in Chengdu how the teams were cooperating much better, not only playing together, but also planning the game together and cooperating in a different way. It was really gender equality in reality, not just on paper,” she noted.

    “I would actually put my head forward and say that the Mixed Team World Cup makes our member associations put priority and resources on female table tennis.”

    Sorling admitted that the inclusion of the mixed team event at LA28 “went much faster than I expected,” while saying it is “a very good proof of concept from the cooperation that we did with the Mixed Team World Cup in Chengdu and from the proposition from 2021.”

    “LA28 will be a new milestone when this event is an Olympic event,” she said.

    Sorling also noted that she and IOC president-elect Kirsty Coventry shared the same athlete-centered view.

    “Kirsty has such a good background being a very decorated athlete herself, but not coming from the International Federation (IF) perspective, very much where I’m coming from. She has so much to contribute with the athletes’ point of view, and in table tennis, we also put the athletes first in everything that we are trying to do.”

    “I believe that I can also help her on the IF perspective to take a bigger part in the presentation of our sport, so that we can engage more with the fans. That is where our cooperation can really increase the level of our game,” she said.

    Asked about her expectations for the ITTF World Table Tennis Championships Finals in Doha, which will kick off on Saturday, Sorling said she expected a thrilling competition, but was wary of making any predictions.

    “Just some weeks ago in Macao, Brazil’s Hugo Calderano won the men’s singles title. I would say it will be very hard for anyone to beat China’s number one and two in the men’s singles,” she remarked. “Table tennis is a mental game, it’s all about the preparation into all the details and the tactics, so it’s for the athletes to focus on the game itself.”

    “I’m very excited about the event. I do believe we will see some surprises, but I’m not the one to predict how it will go,” she grinned.

    “I only can say there was big energy in the venue earlier today when the practice started, and we will have the opening ceremony on Saturday, and then the game is on,” Sorling concluded. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Markey, Van Hollen, Colleagues Question Legality of Trump Administration’s Multi-Million Dollar Payment to El Salvador to Imprison Migrants from U.S.

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Massachusetts Ed Markey
    Letter Text (PDF)
    Washington (May 15, 2025) – Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) led ten colleagues today in writing to Secretary of State Marco Rubio to demand answers regarding the Trump administration’s $6 million payment to the government of El Salvador to support the detention of migrants transferred from the United States, including at the notorious Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo (CECOT) prison.
    The letter was signed by Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Vice Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee Patty Murray (D-Wash.), and Senators Peter Welch (D-Vt.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), and Tim Kaine (D-Va.).
    In the letter the lawmakers write, “The Trump administration has boasted of its $6 million payment to the government of El Salvador to support the detention of migrants transferred from the United States, including at Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo (CECOT) prison. Given the well-documented and credible allegations of gross violations of human rights at CECOT, including from reputable human rights organizations, it appears that this payment may have violated the State Department ‘Leahy law,’ a statutory prohibition against U.S. assistance to foreign security force units credibly implicated in such brutality. These allegations demand a detailed explanation from the Department of State as to whether, and if so how, it concluded that this payment was lawful.”
    The lawmakers continue, “According to Charles Blaha, the former longtime Director of the State Department’s Office of Security and Human Rights, with responsibility for Leahy law vetting: ‘CECOT is a facility that exposes prisoners to torture, and cruel, degrading, and inhumane treatment and punishment. Under the Leahy [l]aw, this should disqualify CECOT from receiving U.S. assistance.’”
    The lawmakers request responses by May 30, 2025, to questions, including:
    How much has the State Department paid El Salvador to detain migrants from the United States at CECOT? Are future payments anticipated?
    What specific uses are associated with the payment, and who are the defined end users?
    Did the Department comply with the requirements of section 7031(a) of the Act regarding government-to-government assistance?
    Did the State Department determine that the payment complied with its Leahy law, after conducting human rights vetting?
    Did the State Department conduct a full review of all publicly available information sources related to the security operations at CECOT?
    Has the State Department received any reports or submissions through its Human Rights Reporting Gateway (https://hrgshr.state.gov/en/) related to abuses at CECOT or its personnel?
    Prior to sending the payment, did the Department of State receive any assurances — diplomatic or otherwise — from the government of El Salvador regarding its treatment of individuals in CECOT or other carceral facilities in the country?
    Did the Department consult with its Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor or its Office of the Legal Adviser regarding the legality of the payment under the State Department Leahy law or other applicable laws and treaties, such as the Convention Against Torture?
    Which specific State Department account or accounts were used to make the payment to El Salvador?

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Why Anthony Albanese’s presence at Pope Leo’s inauguration is shrewd politics

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Darius von Guttner Sporzynski, Historian, Australian Catholic University

    When Prime Minister Anthony Albanese steps into St Peter’s Square for the inaugural Mass of Pope Leo XIV on Sunday, the optics will be far more than pious courtesy.

    For a day, the Vatican will temporarily be the world’s premier diplomatic stage. And a canny Australian leader can use such an occasion to advance domestic and foreign policy agendas simultaneously.

    Faith optics and domestic politics

    Albanese has lately spoken of “reconnecting” with his Catholic heritage. He called the election of the US-born pontiff “momentous” for believers and non-believers alike.

    In multicultural Australia, where roughly one in four citizens identifies as Catholic, Albanese’s trip to the Vatican allows him to reassure a core constituency that sometimes feels politically overlooked: Catholics.

    This signalling costs Albanese nothing. Yet, it helps to boost Labor’s broader narrative of inclusion and respect for faith communities.

    St Peter’s Square as a diplomatic crossroads

    The inaugural mass will also attract a rare concentration of global powerbrokers in one square kilometre. The head-of-state guest list is still fluid, but several confirmations make the trip worth Albanese’s while.

    Albanese’s most immediate objective will likely be to revive free-trade negotiations with the European Union, which broke down in 2023.

    The Australian has reported that Albanese hopes to bend the ear of European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President António Costa.

    Albanese will also get a chance to meet Prince Edward, who will represent King Charles III, as well as his newly elected counterpart in Canada, Prime Minister Mark Carney.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is also expected to attend after a week of overtures to the new pope concerning Kyiv’s quest for a just peace in its war with Russia.

    Speculation was swirling around the possibility of US President Donald Trump returning to Rome, fresh from his high-visibility appearance at Pope Francis’s funeral on April 26.

    But Vice President JD Vance will lead the US delegation, joined by Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

    For Albanese, a corridor encounter with Vance would allow him to set a personal tone before his expected visit to Washington later this year, without the media glare that accompanies an Oval Office photo-op.

    Why leaders flock to the Vatican

    Some commentators may frame the attendance of world leaders at the mass cynically: a chance to use a sacred event for their own political purposes.

    Yet, politicians have long been a fixture at papal events. Such participation is hardly exceptional. It reflects a centuries-old dynamic in which those with temporal political power seek moral sanction, and the papacy demonstrates its enduring capacity to convene the political order.

    Pope Francis’s inauguration in 2013 drew 31 heads of state and 132 official delegations from national governments or international organisations.

    And John Paul II’s funeral in 2005 assembled more than 80 sitting heads of state. It was one of the largest gatherings of leaders in modern history.

    Why does the Vatican exert such magnetic pull?

    First, it is a neutral micro-state whose moral authority can confer legitimacy on secular, political initiatives. Consider, for example, John Paul II’s role in Poland’s democratic revolution.

    Second, the Holy See’s diplomatic corps is the world’s oldest continuous foreign service. It boasts diplomatic relations with 184 states, including Palestine and Taiwan (one of a dozen states in the world to do so).

    Although every pontiff is first and foremost the universal pastor of the Catholic Church, the Lateran Treaty of 1929 also endowed him with full sovereignty over the territory of Vatican City.

    The pope’s head-of-state status is most visible at multilateral forums. In 2024, for instance, Pope Francis became the first pontiff to address a G7 summit, speaking in a special session on artificial intelligence.

    He also had a string of bilateral meetings on the sidelines with the leaders of the United States, Ukraine, France, Brazil, Turkey, Canada and India, among others.

    When a pope travels, host governments roll out the symbols of a state visit, though the Vatican insists on calling such trips “apostolic journeys”. Conversely, when foreign leaders come to Rome, they are received in the pope’s own apartments, not in a government palace. These meetings therefore take on a spiritual, as well as political, cast.

    In short, the pope moves with ease between being a shepherd and sovereign. His spiritual authority opens doors for dialogue, while his head-of-state status allows him to receive ambassadors, sign treaties and sit across the table from presidents and prime ministers.

    The result is a singular blend of moral voice and diplomatic reach unmatched in global affairs.

    Pragmatic statecraft under the colonnade

    For a middle-power such as Australia, dialogue between a prime minister and a pope can have a multiplier top-down effect. These discussions often echo across chancelleries in the Global South, especially in Catholic Latin America and the Philippines. These are both priority markets for Australian education and green-hydrogen exports.

    In Rome, Albanese can also affirm Australia’s commitment to multilateralism at a moment when Indo-Pacific tensions have nudged Canberra towards increased defence spending and an over-militarised image. The sacred stage permits a softer register: diplomacy as dialogue, not deterrence.

    When the incense clears on Sunday, most viewers will remember the pageantry: the fisherman’s ring (a gold signet ring cast for each new pope), the pallium (the white woollen band draped over the pope’s shoulders during mass), and the roar of 100,000 pilgrims.

    Yet, the quieter choreography in the diplomatic boxes may shape trade flows, security partnerships and refugee corridors for years.

    Albanese appears to have recognised this rare alchemy. Showing up in Rome is pragmatic statecraft, executed under Bernini’s colonnade. This is where religious and political figures have long mingled — and will continue to do so as long as popes and prime minister seize the moment.

    Darius von Guttner Sporzynski does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Why Anthony Albanese’s presence at Pope Leo’s inauguration is shrewd politics – https://theconversation.com/why-anthony-albaneses-presence-at-pope-leos-inauguration-is-shrewd-politics-256696

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI China: Walmart warns of price increases as tariffs pressure supply chain

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    People shop at a Walmart store in Rosemead, California, the United States, on May 15, 2025. Walmart on Thursday reported mixed results for its fiscal first quarter ending April 30, narrowly missing revenue expectations as the retailer signaled that rising tariffs are likely to lead to higher prices for consumers. [Photo/Xinhua]

    Walmart on Thursday reported mixed results for its fiscal first quarter ending April 30, narrowly missing revenue expectations as the retailer signaled that rising tariffs are likely to lead to higher prices for consumers.

    While the company beat earnings estimates, Walmart CEO Doug McMillon warned that current tariff levels — despite a temporary reduction on Chinese imports — are “still too high” for Walmart or its suppliers to fully absorb.

    “We will do our best to keep our prices as low as possible. But given the magnitude of the tariffs, even at the reduced levels announced this week, we aren’t able to absorb all the pressure given the reality of narrow retail margins,” McMillon said Thursday on an earnings call. “The higher tariffs will result in higher prices,” he said.

    Walmart’s revenue for the quarter totaled 165.61 billion U.S. dollars, up 2.5 percent from a year ago but slightly below analysts’ expectations of 165.84 billion dollars. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 61 cents, beating the forecast of 58 cents. Net income declined to 4.49 billion from 5.10 billion dollars a year earlier.

    While Walmart achieved its first profitable quarter for its e-commerce operations both in the United States and globally, concerns about future pricing overshadowed the milestone. Tariffs on Chinese imports, particularly in categories like toys and electronics, continue to exert pressure, as do duties on products from countries like Costa Rica, Peru, and Colombia, which have affected prices for items such as coffee, bananas, avocados, and roses.

    “We’re wired for everyday low prices, but the magnitude of these increases is more than any retailer can absorb,” Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey told CNBC. “It’s more than any supplier can absorb. And so I’m concerned that consumers are going to start seeing higher prices.”

    Rainey said the impact would likely start to show toward the end of May and become more noticeable in June. Walmart is working closely with suppliers to maintain value but admitted the speed and scale of cost increases are “a little bit unprecedented.”

    Trade policy remains a significant uncertainty, with about one-third of Walmart’s U.S. merchandise imported from countries including China, Mexico, and Vietnam. While Walmart has not canceled any orders due to tariff concerns, it has scaled back the size of certain shipments to adjust for anticipated changes in consumer demand tied to higher prices. Tariffs have already driven up prices on items like mattresses, toys, and strollers, contributing to higher costs for both businesses and consumers.

    According to the Federal Reserve, tariffs have added approximately 0.3 percent to overall prices this year. In response, some companies are raising prices across their product lines, while others are targeting specific items. Many are choosing to remove high-cost products from their offerings altogether, rather than risk losing sales due to price resistance or being undercut by competitors.

    Despite these challenges, Walmart reported decent performance last quarter. Comparable store sales rose 4.5 percent, largely driven by gains in its grocery segment. The company also reported increased spending from higher-income customers. Walmart maintained its full-year guidance, projecting sales growth of 3.5 percent to 4.5 percent for the current quarter, although it did not provide updated profit forecasts due to the volatility in trade policy. The company’s shares fell slightly in Thursday trading, reflecting investor caution amid the pricing pressures.

    Bank of America analyst Robert Ohmes noted this week that Walmart is “well positioned to manage tariffs,” thanks to its strong supplier relationships and commitment to low prices. Unlike many of its competitors, Walmart sources only about 15 percent of its merchandise from China, reducing its exposure to tariff-related cost spikes. Additionally, roughly 60 percent of Walmart’s inventory consists of groceries, the majority of which are sourced domestically. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Reconciliation Recommendations of the House Committee on Education and Workforce

    Source: US Congressional Budget Office

    Legislation Summary

    H. Con. Res. 14, the Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2025, instructed the House Committee on Education and Workforce to recommend legislative changes that would decrease deficits by not less than a specified amount over the 2025-2034 period. As part of the reconciliation process, the House Committee on Education and Workforce approved legislation on April 29, 2025, with provisions that would decrease deficits over that period.

    The reconciliation recommendations of the House Committee on Education and Workforce would amend the federal student aid programs authorized by the Higher Education Act of 1965. Specifically, the legislation would modify the federal student loan program by changing repayment terms, loan limits, and requirements for institutional eligibility and alter eligibility for the Federal Pell Grant Program. The legislation also would limit the administrative authority of the Department of Education, repeal certain regulations, and create a new institutional grant program funded through payments from postsecondary institutions.

    Estimated Federal Cost

    The reconciliation recommendations of the House Committee on Education and Workforce would decrease deficits by $349.1 billion over the 2025-2034 period, CBO estimates. The estimated budgetary effect of the legislation is shown in Table 1. The costs of the legislation fall within budget functions 500 (education, training, employment, and social services) and 700 (veterans benefits and services).

    Return to Reference

    Table 1.

    Estimated Budgetary Effects of Reconciliation Recommendations Title III, House Committee on Education and Workforce, as Ordered Reported on April 29, 2025

     

    By Fiscal Year, Billions of Dollars

       
     

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    2030

    2031

    2032

    2033

    2034

    2025-2029

    2025-2034

     

    Decreases in Direct Spending

       

    Budget Authority

    -199.1

    -14.7

    -14.5

    -16.8

    -19.8

    -20.5

    -20.9

    -21.2

    -21.6

    -21.8

    -264.8

    -370.8

    Estimated Outlays

    -197.9

    -14.3

    -12.7

    -12.7

    -15.7

    -18.5

    -19.1

    -19.2

    -19.4

    -19.6

    -253.3

    -349.1

     

    Decrease in the Deficit

    From Changes in Direct Spending

       

    Effect on the Deficit

    -197.9

    -14.3

    -12.7

    -12.7

    -15.7

    -18.5

    -19.1

    -19.2

    -19.4

    -19.6

    -253.3

    -349.1

    Basis of Estimate

    For this estimate, CBO assumes that the legislation will be enacted in summer 2025. CBO’s estimates are relative to its January 2025 baseline and cover the period from 2025 through 2034.

    Budgetary Treatment of Federal Student Loans and Pell Grants

    CBO estimates that enacting the legislation would affect spending both for the federal student loan program and for the Federal Pell Grant Program. Those programs are treated differently in the federal budget than most other federal programs.

    Federal Direct Student Loan Program. As required by the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (FCRA), the costs of the federal student loan program are estimated on a net-present-value basis. A present value is a single number that expresses a flow of current and future payments or receipts in terms of an equivalent lump sum paid or received at a specific time. The value depends on the rates of interest, known as the discount rates, used to translate future cash flows into current dollars. FCRA specifies those discount rates as the rates on Treasury securities with similar terms to maturity. As required by FCRA, changes to the estimated costs of outstanding student loans are shown in the year of the enactment of legislation that modifies their terms. The administrative costs of the student loan program are estimated on a cash basis.

    Federal Pell Grant Program. Pell grants provide need-based aid to undergraduate students; they are funded both through discretionary appropriations and through direct spending. For the 2024‑2025 academic year, which began on July 1, 2024, the maximum award funded by discretionary appropriations that a student can receive is $6,335. The discretionary maximum award amount, and the amount of discretionary funding, are set in the annual appropriation act. CBO’s estimate of the program’s cost is based on an assumption that the maximum award will stay the same through 2034.

    The program also has direct spending authority to support a “mandatory add-on,” which increases the award amount by $1,060 above the discretionary maximum. As a result, for the 2024-2025 academic year, the total maximum award is $7,395.

    The bulk of the Pell Grant Program is subject to the appropriation of federal funds. Although CBO anticipates that implementing the legislation would reduce spending subject to appropriation for the discretionary portion of the program, we have not reviewed the legislation for effects on spending subject to appropriation. Only changes to the cost of the mandatory add-on are included in the estimate.

    Direct Spending

    CBO estimates that enacting the legislation would decrease direct spending outlays, on net, by $349.1 billion over the 2025-2034 period (see Table 2).

    Subtitle A. Student Eligibility

    Subtitle A would amend eligibility for federal student aid based on immigration status and adjust the formula for determining the amount of federal aid for which students and their parents would be eligible.

    CBO estimates that enacting subtitle A would decrease direct spending outlays by $518 million over the 2025-2034 period.

    Changes to Aid Eligibility for Certain Immigrants. The legislation would prevent certain aliens (non-U.S. nationals) from receiving federal student aid, including asylees, refugees, Haitian entrants, certain Cuban parolees, T nonimmigrants (trafficking victims), and certain aliens who are victims of domestic violence.

    Overall, CBO expects that enacting this provision would reduce the number of students receiving federal student aid by less than 1,000 each year. Most of the reduction in eligibility would come from Haitian entrants (roughly 70 percent). On that basis, CBO estimates that enacting this provision would reduce direct spending outlays by $15 million over the 2025‑2034 period: $7 million from reductions in the cost of federal student loans and $8 million from reductions in the mandatory add-on for Pell grants.

    Amending Eligibility for Federal Aid. The legislation would cap the total amount of federal aid a student can receive annually at the median cost of college, defined as the median cost of attendance for students enrolled in similar programs. Because loan limits under current law for subsidized and unsubsidized loans are lower, on average, than the median cost of college for most programs, CBO expects that enacting this provision would mostly affect eligibility for parent PLUS and grad PLUS loans. Under current law, students and parents in those programs may borrow up to their institution’s cost of attendance. Using data from the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS) and the National Student Loan Data System (NSLDS), CBO expects enacting this section would reduce annual grad PLUS borrowing by 8 percent and parent PLUS borrowing by 13 percent, primarily for borrowers with the highest cost of attendance.

    In CBO’s estimation, borrowers in the parent PLUS program pay more in principal and interest than they borrow (on a net-present-value basis). On that basis, CBO expects that reducing parent PLUS volume would increase costs to the government. Conversely, CBO estimates that borrowers of other student loans (including grad PLUS loans), on average, repay the government less than they borrowed (on a net-present-value basis). Thus, reducing lending in those programs decreases costs to the government. CBO expects that enacting the provision would reduce net outlays for student loans by $520 million over the 2025-2034 period.

    The legislation also would exclude farm and small business assets from the Student Aid Index (SAI) calculation for Pell grants, generally increasing award levels for students with those assets. Data from a sample of Pell grant recipients indicates that only a small number of recipients or their families own farms or small businesses. CBO estimates that enacting the provision would increase direct spending outlays for Pell grants by $17 million over the 2025-2034 period.

    Subtitle B. Loan Limits

    Beginning July 1, 2026, subtitle B would convert subsidized loans into unsubsidized loans and eliminate the grad PLUS loan program, restrict lending under the parent PLUS program, and amend all annual and aggregate loan limits.

    CBO estimates that enacting the provisions in subtitle B would reduce direct spending outlays by $51.2 billion over the 2025-2034 period. Those savings are estimated on a net-present-value basis and shown in the years in which the loans are originated.

    Eliminate Subsidized Loans and Increase Unsubsidized Loans.The legislation would eliminate subsidized loans and expand borrowing in the unsubsidized loan program for new borrowers starting in academic year 2026-2027, and for all borrowers starting in the 2029‑2030 academic year.

    Under current law, subsidized loans do not accrue interest while the borrower is enrolled in school or in the six months before entering repayment, during the first three years of enrollment in certain income-driven repayment (IDR) plans, and during certain deferment periods. CBO projects that under current law students will borrow roughly $20 billion annually in subsidized loans over the 2026-2034 period. Converting those loans to unsubsidized loans would reduce the cost to the federal government by increasing the interest that borrowers pay on their loans. CBO expects that most students who currently borrow in the subsidized loan program would continue to borrow the same amount in the unsubsidized program. Enacting this provision would reduce outlays by $20.2 billion over the 2025-2034 period, CBO estimates.

    Eliminate Grad PLUS Loans and Amend Limits for Unsubsidized Graduate Loans. The legislation would eliminate grad PLUS loans for new graduate borrowers starting in academic year 2026-2027, and for all borrowers starting in the 2029-2030 academic year.

    The legislation also would amend annual and aggregate loan limits for graduate students in the unsubsidized graduate loan program. Specifically, the legislation would allow graduate students to take out unsubsidized loans up to the median annual cost of their program, with an aggregate maximum of $100,000, or $150,000 if the borrower is enrolled in a graduate professional program. Under current law, graduate students may borrow up to $20,500 each year in unsubsidized loans (with a total aggregate cap for most borrowers of $138,500), and they can borrow up to the cost of attendance in grad PLUS loans, which do not have an aggregate cap.

    Under current law, CBO estimates that borrowers will take out roughly $19 billion in grad PLUS loans annually over the 2026-2034 period. Based on an analysis of current borrowing patterns in NPSAS and NSLDS, CBO expects that students who would have borrowed in the grad PLUS program under current law would instead borrow in the graduate unsubsidized program, up to the new limits.

    CBO expects that enacting both provisions would increase unsubsidized graduate borrowing by 25 percent. On that basis, CBO estimates that eliminating grad PLUS loans and amending unsubsidized loan limits for graduate borrowers would reduce outlays by $34.7 billion over the 2025‑2034 period.

    Restrict Parent PLUS Borrowing and Amend Undergraduate Loan Limits. Beginning on July 1, 2026, the legislation would cap parent PLUS loans at the student’s cost of attendance, by program, minus the maximum in unsubsidized loans the student may borrow in a given year. Students would be required to take out that maximum amount before their parent could borrow under the parent PLUS program. The legislation would set an aggregate cap of $50,000 for parent PLUS loans. There is no aggregate cap on parent PLUS borrowing under current law.

    Additionally, beginning on July 1, 2026, the legislation would allow undergraduate students regardless of dependency status, to take out unsubsidized loans up to the median cost of college for their program of study in a given year, minus any amount awarded in a Pell grant for that year. The aggregate borrowing limit for all undergraduate borrowers would be $50,000.

    Under current law, dependent and independent undergraduate students are subject to different annual and aggregate loan limits based on their class level in school and dependency type. On average, the median cost of college exceeds the current annual loan limits for dependent and independent students. Those current aggregate limits are $31,000 for dependent students and $57,500 for independent students.

    Under current law, CBO estimates that parent PLUS borrowers will take out an average of roughly $13 billion in loans annually over the 2026-2034 period. Under the loan limits specified in the legislation, CBO estimates that parent PLUS borrowing would total roughly $4 billion annually, on average, over the same period.

    The legislation also would permit institutions to cap annual loan amounts according to a student’s program of study, as long as that limit is applied consistently to all students enrolled in a given program. Using information from financial aid associations and other sources, along with data from NPSAS, CBO expects that, under the new loan limits, this provision would limit some of the otherwise expected increase in lending.

    Finally, the legislation would treat pilot-training programs as professional programs, allowing those undergraduate students to borrow up to $150,000. (Currently those students can borrow up to the amount set for their undergraduate aggregate cap, based on dependency).

    CBO estimates that the increases in limits on undergraduate unsubsidized loans, in combination with the restrictions on parent PLUS loans and other provisions, would increase undergraduate borrowing in the unsubsidized program by roughly 15 percent.

    In CBO’s estimation, borrowers in the parent PLUS program pay more in principal and interest than they borrow (on a net-present-value basis). Thus, CBO expects that reducing parent PLUS volume would increase costs to the government. Conversely, CBO estimates that borrowers of undergraduate loans, on average, repay the government less than they borrowed (on a net-present-value basis). Thus, increasing lending of undergraduate loans increases costs to the government. CBO estimates that enacting those provisions together would increase outlays for student loans by $19.1 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    Set Annual Loan Limits by Enrollment Intensity.The legislation would reduce annual loan limits for undergraduate and graduate loans for students who are not enrolled full time in proportion to their hours of enrollment. Under current law, students enrolled at least half time (for example, six credit hours per semester) are eligible for the full annual loan amounts. Using data from NPSAS and NSLDS, CBO expects that this provision would reduce the volume of loans made to students by about 5 percent and reduce outlays by $15.4 billion over the 2025‑2034 period, relative to current law.

    Subtitle C. Loan Repayment

    The legislation would amend repayment terms for current and new student loan borrowers by limiting income-driven repayment options and extending terms for standard plans based on the amount of debt a borrower holds.

    CBO estimates that those changes would reduce direct spending outlays for student loans by $294.6 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    For this analysis, CBO used survey data from NPSAS and administrative data from NSLDS. The agency supplemented that information with other data as inputs to project borrowers’ lifetime earnings and repayment of loans. CBO also consulted with a range of experts on postsecondary student aid and reviewed literature on postsecondary enrollment and borrowing.

    Loan Repayment for New Loans.Under the legislation, the Department of Education would offer borrowers two repayment plans for loans originated after June 30, 2026: a standard repayment plan and a new IDR plan. The legislation would eliminate all other plans, including the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan, the IDR plan created administratively in 2023.

    Loans entering repayment would automatically be enrolled in a standard repayment plan, with the length of the repayment term determined by the amount borrowed:

    • 10 years for borrowers with balances less than $25,000;
    • 15 years for borrowers with balances between $25,000 and $50,000;
    • 20 years for borrowers with balances between $50,000 and $100,000; and
    • 25 years for borrowers with balances greater than $100,000.

    Monthly payments would be fixed for the life of the loan. Borrowers with balances greater than $25,000 who fully repay their loans over the longer repayment period would pay more interest, but their monthly payments would be smaller than if they were in a 10-year standard plan.

    Borrowers would be able to select a new IDR plan, called the Repayment Assistance Plan, which would:

    • Set a minimum monthly payment of $10. All existing IDR plans generally allow for payments of zero for borrowers with low income.
    • Set payments to between 1 percent and 10 percent of a borrower’s total adjusted gross income, depending on the borrower’s income, and reduce payments by $50 per month for every dependent child. Under the current SAVE Plan, borrowers pay between 5 percent and 10 percent of their income above 225 percent of the federal poverty guideline, after accounting for family size.
    • Waive 100 percent of unpaid, accrued interest when a borrower’s calculated payment does not cover accrued interest; the same is true for the current SAVE Plan.
    • Match the monthly amount paid by borrowers up to $50 and apply that match to the outstanding principal balance; the current SAVE Plan has no such match.
    • Forgive any remaining balance after 30 years of repayment. The current SAVE Plan forgives balances after 10 to 25 years of repayment, depending on the loan type and amount borrowed.
    • Require borrowers to remain on the plan until their balance is paid in full, or 30 years, whichever is sooner. Currently, borrowers can switch into other plans.

    Under the legislation, CBO estimates that about 40 percent of the loan volume originated after June 30, 2026, would be repaid through the proposed IDR plan. In contrast, under current law, CBO estimates that roughly 70 percent of loan volume would be repaid under existing IDR plans. Borrowers repaying their loans would pay more, on average, under the IDR plan proposed in the legislation than under current law. For new loans, CBO estimates that implementing the new repayment plans would decrease outlays by $133.6 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    Borrowers in Repayment.Under subtitle C, borrowers who currently are in any IDR plan would be transferred to a newly proposed IDR plan. Under that plan, payments would be set at 15 percent of a borrower’s discretionary income, with no cap on payment amounts, and borrowers would receive forgiveness of any outstanding debt after 20 years in repayment if they have undergraduate loans only and 25 years if they also have graduate loans. Borrowers could also opt into the new Repayment Assistance Plan (described above) or into a standard repayment plan.

    As required by FCRA, the savings from changes to the costs of existing loans would be recorded in fiscal year 2025. CBO estimates that changes to repayment terms for borrowers currently in repayment would reduce outlays by $162.0 billion in fiscal year 2025.

    Other Changes. Enacting subtitle C also would have other effects:

    • For loans disbursed on or after July 1, 2025, the subtitle would eliminate unemployment and economic hardship deferments and reduce the total period a borrower may be in forbearance. CBO expects borrowers who otherwise would have taken those types of deferments would, under the legislation, enroll in the new IDR plan, begin repaying sooner than under current law, or default. On average, CBO estimates that borrowers would pay less on their loans under the legislation than under current law. CBO estimates that enacting this provision would increase outlays by $340 million over the 2025-2034 period.
    • Loan repayments by new graduate doctors and dentists during residency would not be counted toward the total number of payments needed to qualify for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program. The provision also would allow four years of interest-free forbearance for borrowers in medical or dental internships or residencies on loans disbursed on or after July 1, 2025. CBO estimates that implementing this provision would, on net, decrease outlays by $430 million over the 2025-2034 period.
    • Borrowers would be permitted to rehabilitate defaulted loans twice. CBO estimates that implementing this provision would increase outlays by $130 million over the 2025-2034 period.
    • The legislation would directly appropriate $500 million in fiscal year 2025 and in fiscal year 2026 for servicing student loans. CBO estimates that implementing this provision would increase outlays by $1.0 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    Subtitle D. Pell Grants

    Subtitle D would change eligibility rules for the Federal Pell Grant Program. Although the effective date for most of the subtitle’s provisions is July 1, 2025, CBO expects that date would not provide sufficient time to implement the provisions for the 2025-2026 academic year, which begins on July 1, 2025. We assume for this estimate that those provisions will take effect on July 1, 2026, for the 2026-2027 academic year.

    Pell grant eligibility is determined by the Student Aid Index, a formula that accounts for students’ income and assets and, for dependent students, family income and assets. An SAI is calculated for each student and used to determine their award amount; a higher SAI represents lower financial need. Awards are prorated relative to the definition of full-time enrollment for their school’s curriculum type. Students who qualify for an amount below the maximum, or who do not qualify on the basis of their SAI, may still qualify if their adjusted gross income meets thresholds that are based on the federal poverty guideline.

    Most of the estimates below are based on analyzing a sample of aid applicants and Pell grant recipients that CBO received from the Department of Education. Additional sources of data are discussed with each estimate.

    The costs discussed here are for direct spending outlays only; they involve changes to the mandatory add-on. CBO has not reviewed the legislation for changes in spending subject to appropriation, and estimates of the cost for the discretionary portion of the program are not included.

    CBO estimates that enacting subtitle D would increase direct spending outlays by $2.8 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    Foreign Income and Federal Pell Grant Eligibility. Subtitle D would amend the eligibility calculation to include foreign income, most of which is excluded from the calculation under current law. That would reduce the award amounts for some recipients with foreign income. CBO estimates that less than 1 percent of Pell grant recipients earn foreign income. On that basis, CBO estimates that enacting this provision would reduce direct spending outlays by $66 million over the 2025-2034 period.

    Change the Definition of Full-Time Enrollment. Subtitle D would increase the number of credits needed to qualify for full-time enrollment from 12 per semester to 30 per year. Under current law, students who are enrolled less than full time receive prorated grants. Raising the number of credits would decrease award amounts for students who currently are enrolled in fewer than 30 credits per year. CBO estimates that under this provision, more than half of students currently enrolled would receive smaller grants. Based on past award increases, National Student Clearinghouse data on time to completion, and existing financial incentives for early graduation, CBO estimates that about one-fifth of expected grant recipients would enroll in additional credits to increase their award amounts. On that basis, CBO estimates that enacting this provision would reduce direct spending outlays by $7.1 billion over the 2025‑2034 period.

    Eliminate Eligibility for Students With a High SAI. Subtitle D would eliminate eligibility for students whose SAI is double the amount for the Pell grant maximum award. CBO estimates that less than 1 percent of Pell grant recipients meet or exceed that threshold, and those who do generally receive the minimum award. On that basis, CBO estimates that enacting this provision would reduce direct spending outlays by $78 million over the 2025‑2034 period.

    Eliminate Eligibility for Students Enrolled Less Than Half Time. Subtitle D would require a student to be enrolled half time, that is, for at least six credits per semester, to receive a grant. Program data indicate that in recent academic years roughly 10 percent of recipients were enrolled for less than half time. Based on past increases under the program and data from the National Student Clearinghouse on time to completion, CBO expects that about one-third of the recipients who would lose their award under this provision would enroll in additional credits to avoid doing so. CBO estimates that enacting this provision would reduce direct spending outlays by $687 million over the 2025-2034 period.

    Workforce Pell Grants. Subtitle D would extend eligibility for Pell grants to students enrolled in workforce programs that can be completed in 150 to 600 clock hours, or an equivalent number of credit hours, provided the program meets standards for certification, completion, and after-graduation earnings. Under current law, students enrolled in programs requiring fewer than 600 clock hours are ineligible for Pell grants.

    Using data from the Department of Education, statistics from the American Association of Community Colleges, and published reports, CBO estimates that, under the legislation, by 2034 about 100,000 new recipients each year would receive Workforce Pell Grants of about $2,200 each (about 20 percent of that amount would come from mandatory funds). On that basis, CBO estimates that enacting the provision would increase the cost of the mandatory add-on by $298 million over the 2025-2034 period.

    To be eligible for Pell grant funds, postsecondary programs would need to demonstrate job placement and completion rates of at least 70 percent. Their tuition and fees must not exceed the difference between the median earnings of students who complete the program and 150 percent of the federal poverty guideline.

    CBO expects that fewer than half of the current short-term programs at institutions that already receive financial aid under title IV of the Higher Education Act would become newly eligible under the legislation. However, using information from community colleges and research on postsecondary education, CBO expects that many of the students already receive Pell grants because they are enrolled in short-term programs that are “stacked” within longer-term programs that are eligible for Pell grant funding. As a result, under current law, those students can receive Pell grants even if they do not complete the longer-term program.

    In addition, many short-term programs that do not currently receive federal financial aid funding, particularly those in the proprietary sector, would not participate in the Pell Grant Program under the legislation. Those institutions would be excluded either because they could not meet the requirements in the legislation or because they would choose not to meet the additional requirements for participation in federal student aid programs.

    Pell Shortfall. Subtitle D would directly appropriate additional mandatory funds to support the portion of Pell grants funded mostly through annual discretionary appropriations: $3.2 billion in 2026, $4.8 billion in 2027, and $2.5 billion in 2028. Enacting the provision would increase direct spending outlays by $10.5 billion over the 2025-2034 period, CBO estimates.

    Subtitle E. Accountability

    Under the legislation, postsecondary institutions could be required to make annual payments, called risk-sharing payments, in order to participate in the federal student loan program. Those payments would be the main source of funding for the Promoting Real Opportunities to Maximize Investments and Savings in Education (PROMISE) grants, which would be made to eligible postsecondary education institutions to help improve affordability and promote success for students.

    CBO estimated the amounts in risk-sharing payments on a cash basis rather than using FCRA procedures because those annual payments are based on cohorts of loans and are not tied directly to, or made on behalf of, any individual loan. The legislation defines loan cohorts as groups of loans to borrowers who exit a program in the same year. CBO estimated the effects of those provisions as if all other provisions in the legislation were enacted simultaneously. For example, the estimate for the amount of risk-sharing payments incorporates the assumptions that borrowers would no longer be eligible for the current SAVE Plan, that grad PLUS loans would no longer be available, and that new loan limits would be in place.

    CBO estimates that enacting subtitle E would reduce direct spending outlays by $6.2 billion over the 2025‑2034 period.

    Risk-Sharing Payments. The legislation would require some institutions to make annual payments to the Department of Education as a condition for participating in the student loan program. Those payments would be recorded as offsetting receipts—that is, as reductions in direct spending. Payments would be based on a formula that considers the amount of loan payments in a cohort that are waived, matched, or forgiven in the new IDR plan or that borrowers fail to make in a timely manner; the total cost of a program for borrowers who complete that program; and borrowers’ expected future earnings.

    CBO calculated risk-sharing payments based on our estimates of repayments under the legislation’s proposed Repayment Assistance Plan, information from the College Scorecard database (which gathers data on institutional costs, graduation and employment rates, and student loan borrowing), and the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. CBO also analyzed delinquency and default rates using data from NSLDS.

    CBO anticipates that the first risk-sharing payments would be made by institutions late in fiscal year 2028, after the Department of Education issues new rules, and that the department would apply the requirements prospectively on loans made beginning in the 2027-2028 academic year. We expect that initially, risk-sharing payments would be small but would increase as more borrowers entered repayment on loans originated after June 30, 2027. CBO estimates that by 2034, risk-sharing payments would be $1.3 billion and would continue to increase after that year.

    CBO estimates that enacting this provision would reduce outlays by $5.3 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    Reduction in Institutional Participation in Federal Student Aid Programs.Given the high cost of risk-sharing payments to institutions and the considerable uncertainty about that cost over the lifetime of any given loan, CBO expects that some institutions would take action to avoid making those payments: Some would choose not to participate in the federal student loan program, others would close certain institutional programs, and still others would close altogether. Based on CBO’s analysis of calculated risk-sharing payments, information from associations of schools and from people with knowledge of postsecondary financial aid programs, we estimate that enacting this provision would reduce projected loan volume, after all other policies in the legislation, by roughly 20 percent.

    By 2028, CBO estimates that, after incorporating all of the provisions of the legislation, 1 dollar of student loan volume would cost the federal government, on average, about 3 cents. On that basis, CBO estimates that the reduction in loan volume would reduce outlays by $3.6 billion over the 2025‑2034 period.

    CBO expects that decisions by institutions to avoid risk-sharing payments also would affect federal spending for the Pell grant mandatory add-on. In general, institutions that leave the federal student loan program would be expected to continue to participate in the Pell Grant Program. However, based on the literature included as part of the Department of Education’s rulemaking on gainful employment and financial transparency (see “Subtitle F, Regulatory Relief” below for more information), CBO expects that some students enrolled in programs or schools that close as a result of the legislation’s risk-sharing requirements would not reenroll in other programs. Thus, CBO estimates that enacting the risk-sharing provision would reduce direct spending outlays for the Pell grant mandatory add-on by $397 million over the 2025‑2034 period.

    PROMISE Grants. The legislation would institute PROMISE grants, funded by institutional risk-sharing payments. Institutions would be required to meet certain requirements to be eligible for the grants, including guaranteeing a maximum total price charged to a student for a given program.

    Under the grant formula, an eligible institution could receive up to $5,000 for each student receiving federal financial aid each year, depending on the availability of funds. Along with additional criteria, the formula compares students’ earnings after completion of a program with the cost of tuition.

    CBO expects that PROMISE grants, which would be classified as direct spending, would be awarded as funds become available. Using information from the College Scorecard database and the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System and considering estimated risk-sharing payments, CBO estimates that PROMISE grants would increase outlays by $3.0 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    Return of Title IV Funds for Student Loans and the Pell Grant Mandatory Add-On. The legislation would allow the Department of Education to reallocate federal student aid that is returned to the government under title IV of the Higher Education Act to fund PROMISE grants. CBO estimates that enacting this provision would increase direct spending for student loans because it would change the underlying cost of those loans. Funding PROMISE grants with returned funds from Pell grants also would increase direct spending because the mandatory add-on for Pell grants is not subject to appropriation. CBO estimates that using those returned funds for PROMISE grants would increase direct spending outlays by $111 million over the 2025-2034 period.

    Subtitle F. Regulatory Relief

    The legislation would repeal several rules and regulations affecting institutional eligibility for federal student aid, and the terms under which a student loan borrower could receive forgiveness.

    CBO estimates that enacting subtitle F would reduce direct spending outlays by $9.0 billion over the 2025‑2034 period.

    Repeal the 90/10 Rule. The legislation would repeal the requirement that for-profit institutions receive no more than 90 percent of their revenue from federal financial aid, including veterans’ education benefits. CBO anticipates that repealing the rule would allow schools whose revenue comes primarily from federal sources to expand enrollment and that the schools closest to the 90 percent threshold would be the most likely to do so. CBO estimates that enacting this provision would increase direct spending outlays by about $1.6 billion over the 2025-2034 period: $1.3 billion for increased student loan volume, $297 million for the Pell grant mandatory add-on, and $25 million for veterans’ education benefits.

    Repeal the Gainful Employment Rule. The legislation strikes all references to “gainful employment” from the Higher Education Act. CBO expects that the Department of Education would implement that change by repealing the regulations related to gainful employment. Those regulations establish a debt-to-earnings ratio and an earnings premium test that for-profit institutions, and certain non-degree-granting programs at two-year institutions, would need to meet for the programs to remain eligible for federal student aid. Based on a literature review, CBO estimates that repealing the rules would increase both student borrowing and the number of Pell grant recipients by about 2 percent. On that basis, CBO estimates that enacting the provision would increase direct spending outlays by about $6 billion over the 2025‑2034 period: $5.1 billion for student loans and $918 million for the Pell grant mandatory add-on.

    Repeal the Closed-Schools Discharges Rule. The legislation would repeal a rule that established an automatic process for discharging loans made to borrowers who attended schools that closed, thus increasing the likelihood of loan discharge for those borrowers. Using information from the Department of Education, CBO estimates that repealing the rule would reduce outlays by $5.2 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    Repeal the Borrower Defense to Repayment Rule. The legislation would repeal a rule that made it easier for borrowers’ loans to be discharged as a result of a school’s misconduct, including, for example, misrepresentation of student outcomes. Based on an analysis of loan volume at schools that were or are under investigation for issues that could fall under that rule, and using data from the Department of Education, CBO estimates that enacting the change would reduce outlays by $11.5 billion over the 2025-2034 period.

    Subtitle G. Limitation on Authority

    Subtitle G would limit the authority of the Department of Education to issue regulations that would increase the cost of federal student loans or that would have economically significant effects (that is, that would have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or that would adversely affect the economy in a material way). CBO’s baseline includes costs that reflect the possibility of future administrative actions that would increase the cost to the government of federal student loans.

    CBO estimates that enacting subtitle G would decrease outlays for student loans by $31.8 billion over the 2025‑2034 period.

    Interactions Among Provisions

    Most provisions discussed in this document were estimated relative to current law. The effects on direct spending of simultaneously enacting all of the provisions in the legislation would differ from the sum of effects from enacting each provision separately relative to CBO’s baseline.

    The estimates for provisions to which that does not apply concern the risk-sharing payments and PROMISE grants, which were estimated relative to CBO’s baseline as adjusted to include the effects of all other policies in the legislation. Those estimates contain some interactions not shown in the “Interactions” row in Chief, Finance, Housing, and Education Cost Estimates Unit

    Kathleen FitzGerald 
    Chief, Public and Private Mandates Unit

    Christina Hawley Anthony
    Deputy Director of Budget Analysis

    H. Samuel Papenfuss 
    Deputy Director of Budget Analysis

    Chad Chirico 
    Director of Budget Analysis

    Phillip L. Swagel

    Director, Congressional Budget Office

                       

    Budget Authority

    0

    1,400

    2,060

    2,490

    2,710

    2,710

    2,700

    2,700

    2,710

    2,780

    8,660

    22,260

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    830

    1,640

    2,100

    2,360

    2,430

    2,420

    2,420

    2,420

    2,460

    6,930

    19,080

    Set Annual Loan Limits by Enrollment Intensity

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    -1,140

    -1,860

    -2,130

    -2,120

    -2,210

    -2,140

    -2,190

    -2,230

    -2,070

    -7,250

    -18,090

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    -680

    -1,430

    -1,800

    -1,870

    -1,920

    -1,910

    -1,910

    -1,950

    -1,880

    -5,780

    -15,350

    Subtotal, Subtitle B

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    -2,730

    -5,000

    -5,970

    -7,290

    -7,620

    -7,830

    -7,970

    -8,200

    -7,870

    -20,990

    -60,480

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    -1,630

    -3,720

    -4,930

    -6,020

    -6,650

    -6,890

    -7,020

    -7,210

    -7,110

    -16,300

    -51,180

    Subtitle C. Loan Repayment

                         

    Sec. 30021, Loan Repayment

                         

    Budget Authority

    -175,670

    -14,380

    -15,010

    -15,020

    -15,240

    -15,440

    -15,610

    -15,740

    -15,910

    -16,080

    -235,320

    -314,100

    Estimated Outlays

    -174,260

    -12,480

    -13,020

    -13,240

    -13,350

    -13,560

    -13,740

    -13,900

    -13,960

    -14,130

    -226,350

    -295,640

    Sec. 30022, Deferment; Forbearance and

    Sec. 30024, Public Service Loan Forgiveness

                       

    Eliminate Unemployment and Economic Hardship Deferments

                       

    Budget Authority

    20

    40

    40

    40

    40

    40

    40

    40

    50

    50

    180

    400

    Estimated Outlays

    20

    30

    30

    30

    30

    40

    40

    40

    40

    40

    140

    340

    Doctor and Dentist Residency Considerations

                         

    Budget Authority

    50

    70

    20

    -30

    -80

    -100

    -100

    -100

    -100

    -100

    30

    -470

    Estimated Outlays

    50

    50

    30

    -10

    -60

    -90

    -100

    -100

    -100

    -100

    60

    -430

    Sec. 30023, Loan Rehabilitation

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    60

    135

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    10

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    15

    55

    130

    Sec. 30025, Student Loan Servicing

                         

    Budget Authority

    500

    500

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    1,000

    1,000

    Estimated Outlays

    50

    300

    450

    200

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    1,000

    1,000

    Subtotal, Subtitle C

                         

    Budget Authority

    -175,100

    -13,755

    -14,935

    -14,995

    -15,265

    -15,485

    -15,655

    -15,785

    -15,945

    -16,115

    -234,050

    -313,035

    Estimated Outlays

    -174,140

    -12,090

    -12,495

    -13,005

    -13,365

    -13,595

    -13,785

    -13,945

    -14,005

    -14,175

    -225,095

    -294,600

                         

    (Continued)

    Table 2.

    Estimated Changes in Direct Spending Under Reconciliation Recommendations Title III, House Committee on Education and Workforce, as Ordered Reported on April 29, 2025

    (Continued)

     

    By Fiscal Year, Millions of Dollars

       
     

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    2030

    2031

    2032

    2033

    2034

    2025-2029

    2025-2034

     

    Increases or Decreases (-) in Direct Spending

       

    Subtitle D. Pell Grants

                         

    Sec. 30031, Eligibility

                         

    Foreign Income and Federal Pell 
    Grant Eligibility

                       

    Budget Authority

    0

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -9

    -32

    -73

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    -2

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -8

    -26

    -66

    Change the Definition of
    Full-Time Enrollment

                       

    Budget Authority

    0

    -830

    -840

    -848

    -856

    -874

    -882

    -891

    -898

    -902

    -3,374

    -7,821

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    -216

    -824

    -842

    -850

    -861

    -876

    -884

    -893

    -899

    -2,732

    -7,145

    Eliminate Eligibility for Students With a High SAI

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    -9

    -9

    -9

    -9

    -10

    -10

    -10

    -10

    -10

    -36

    -86

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    -2

    -9

    -9

    -9

    -9

    -10

    -10

    -10

    -10

    -29

    -78

    Eliminate Eligibility for Students Enrolled Less Than Half Time

                       

    Budget Authority

    0

    -21

    -43

    -65

    -87

    -109

    -110

    -111

    -112

    -113

    -216

    -771

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    -6

    -27

    -48

    -71

    -93

    -109

    -110

    -111

    -112

    -152

    -687

    Sec. 30032, Workforce 
    Pell Grants

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    18

    21

    36

    41

    42

    42

    42

    43

    43

    116

    328

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    5

    19

    25

    38

    41

    42

    42

    43

    43

    87

    298

    Sec. 30033, Pell Shortfall

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    3,181

    4,822

    2,507

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    10,510

    10,510

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    827

    3,576

    4,204

    1,878

    25

    0

    0

    0

    0

    10,485

    10,510

    Subtotal, Subtitle D

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    2,331

    3,943

    1,613

    -919

    -959

    -968

    -978

    -985

    -991

    6,968

    2,087

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    606

    2,727

    3,322

    978

    -905

    -961

    -970

    -979

    -986

    7,633

    2,832

                         

    (Continued)

    Table 2.

    Estimated Changes in Direct Spending Under Reconciliation Recommendations Title III, House Committee on Education and Workforce, as Ordered Reported on April 29, 2025

    (Continued)

     

    By Fiscal Year, Millions of Dollars

       
     

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    2030

    2031

    2032

    2033

    2034

    2025-2029

    2025-2034

     

    Increases or Decreases (-) in Direct Spending

       

    Subtitle E. Accountability

                         

    Sec. 30041, Agreements With Institutions

                       

    Risk-Sharing Payments

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    0

    0

    -10

    -160

    -580

    -890

    -1,070

    -1,220

    -1,340

    -170

    -5,270

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    0

    0

    -10

    -160

    -580

    -890

    -1,070

    -1,220

    -1,340

    -170

    -5,270

    Institutional Participation

                         

    Student Loans

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    0

    -50

    -160

    -350

    -520

    -690

    -700

    -710

    -710

    -560

    -3,890

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    0

    -30

    -120

    -280

    -460

    -630

    -700

    -710

    -710

    -430

    -3,640

    Pell Grants

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    0

    -8

    -21

    -41

    -61

    -82

    -82

    -82

    -82

    -70

    -459

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    0

    -2

    -11

    -26

    -46

    -66

    -82

    -82

    -82

    -39

    -397

    Sec. 30042, Campus-Based Aid Programs

                       

    PROMISE Grants

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    0

    0

    10

    160

    580

    890

    1,070

    1,220

    1,340

    170

    5,270

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    50

    270

    650

    930

    1,110

    0

    3,010

    Return of Title IV Funds

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    0

    0

    14

    20

    20

    20

    20

    20

    20

    34

    134

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0

    31

    20

    20

    20

    20

    0

    111

    Subtotal, Subtitle E

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    0

    -58

    -167

    -371

    -561

    -752

    -762

    -772

    -772

    -596

    -4,215

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    0

    -32

    -141

    -466

    -1,005

    -1,296

    -1,182

    -1,062

    -1,002

    -639

    -6,186

    Subtitle F. Regulatory Relief

                         

    Sec. 30051, Regulatory Relief

                         

    Repeal the 90/10 Rule

                         

    Student Loans

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    40

    80

    130

    170

    220

    220

    220

    230

    230

    420

    1,540

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    30

    70

    100

    140

    180

    200

    200

    200

    200

    340

    1,320

    Pell Grants

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    17

    25

    34

    42

    42

    42

    42

    43

    43

    118

    330

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    4

    19

    27

    36

    42

    42

    42

    42

    43

    86

    297

                         

    (Continued)

    Table 2.

    Estimated Changes in Direct Spending Under Reconciliation Recommendations Title III, House Committee on Education and Workforce, as Ordered Reported on April 29, 2025

    (Continued)

     

    By Fiscal Year, Millions of Dollars

       
     

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    2030

    2031

    2032

    2033

    2034

    2025-2029

    2025-2034

     

    Increases or Decreases (-) in Direct Spending

       

    Veterans’ Education Benefits

                         

    Budget Authority

    0

    2

    2

    3

    3

    3

    3

    3

    3

    3

    10

    25

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    2

    2

    3

    3

    3

    3

    3

    3

    3

    10

    25

    Repeal the Gainful Employment Rule

                       

    Student Loans

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    160

    330

    490

    670

    840

    850

    860

    870

    870

    1,650

    5,940

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    100

    250

    400

    560

    710

    760

    770

    780

    780

    1,310

    5,110

    Pell Grants

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    111

    111

    111

    111

    111

    112

    112

    112

    112

    444

    1,003

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    29

    109

    111

    111

    111

    111

    112

    112

    112

    360

    918

    Repeal the Closed-School Discharge Rule

                         

    Budget Authority

    -1,450

    -380

    -400

    -430

    -460

    -490

    -520

    -550

    -580

    -620

    -3,120

    -5,880

    Estimated Outlays

    -1,410

    -330

    -350

    -370

    -390

    -420

    -450

    -470

    -500

    -530

    -2,850

    -5,220

    Repeal the Borrower Defense to Repayment Rule

                         

    Budget Authority

    -2,180

    -1,070

    -1,100

    -1,130

    -1,160

    -1,190

    -1,220

    -1,250

    -1,280

    -1,320

    -6,640

    -12,900

    Estimated Outlays

    -2,090

    -930

    -960

    -990

    -1,010

    -1,040

    -1,070

    -1,100

    -1,120

    -1,150

    -5,980

    -11,460

    Subtotal, Subtitle F

                         

    Budget Authority

    -3,630

    -1,120

    -952

    -792

    -624

    -464

    -513

    -563

    -602

    -682

    -7,118

    -9,942

    Estimated Outlays

    -3,500

    -1,095

    -860

    -719

    -550

    -414

    -404

    -443

    -483

    -542

    -6,724

    -9,010

    Subtitle G. Limitation on Authority

                       

    Sec. 30061, Limitation on the Authority of the Secretary to Propose or Issue Regulations and Executive Actions

                       

    Budget Authority

    -20,300

    -1,300

    -1,400

    -1,400

    -1,400

    -1,500

    -1,500

    -1,500

    -1,600

    -1,600

    -25,800

    -33,500

    Estimated Outlays

    -20,200

    -1,200

    -1,200

    -1,200

    -1,300

    -1,300

    -1,300

    -1,300

    -1,400

    -1,400

    -25,100

    -31,800

                         

    (Continued)

    Table 2.

    Estimated Changes in Direct Spending Under Reconciliation Recommendations Title III, House Committee on Education and Workforce, as Ordered Reported on April 29, 2025

    (Continued)

     

    By Fiscal Year, Millions of Dollars

       
     

    2025

    2026

    2027

    2028

    2029

    2030

    2031

    2032

    2033

    2034

    2025-2029

    2025-2034

     

    Increases or Decreases (-) in Direct Spending

       

    Interactions

                           

    Student Loans

                           

    Budget Authority

    -100

    2,110

    4,230

    5,270

    6,520

    6,600

    6,800

    6,900

    7,020

    6,810

    18,030

    52,160

    Estimated Outlays

    -100

    1,190

    3,090

    4,320

    5,380

    5,860

    6,020

    6,140

    6,250

    6,160

    13,880

    44,310

    Pell Grants

                           

    Budget Authority

    0

    -182

    -245

    -310

    -375

    -437

    -440

    -443

    -447

    -448

    -1,112

    -3,327

    Estimated Outlays

    0

    -47

    -196

    -261

    -326

    -391

    -437

    -441

    -444

    -447

    -830

    -2,990

    Total Interactions

                           

    Budget Authority

    -100

    1,928

    3,985

    4,960

    6,145

    6,163

    6,360

    6,457

    6,573

    6,362

    16,918

    48,833

    Estimated Outlays

    -100

    1,143

    2,894

    4,059

    5,054

    5,469

    5,583

    5,699

    5,806

    5,713

    13,050

    41,320

    Total Changes

                           

    Budget Authority

    -199,130

    -14,653

    -14,452

    -16,791

    -19,779

    -20,491

    -20,928

    -21,186

    -21,630

    -21,767

    -264,805

    -370,807

    Estimated Outlays

    -197,940

    -14,271

    -12,711

    -12,654

    -15,719

    -18,460

    -19,123

    -19,241

    -19,427

    -19,596

    -253,295

    -349,142

     

    Net Decrease in the Deficit 
    From Changes in Direct Spending

       

    Effect on the Deficit

    -197,940

    -14,271

    -12,711

    -12,654

    -15,719

    -18,460

    -19,123

    -19,241

    -19,427

    -19,596

    -253,295

    -349,142

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Sky Quarry Reports First Quarter 2025 Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    WOODS CROSS, Utah, May 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Sky Quarry Inc. (NASDAQ: SKYQ) (“Sky Quarry” or “the Company”), an integrated energy solutions company committed to revolutionizing the waste asphalt shingle recycling industry, today announced its financial and operational results for the three months ended March 31, 2025.

    Key Financial and Operational Highlights

    • Generated $6.3 million in Q1 revenue, a 50% increase from Q4 2024.
    • Signed a Letter of Intent with R & R Solutions, the only permitted asphalt shingle recycler in New Mexico, to explore the feasibility of establishing a modular waste-to-energy site in the Southwest.
    • Executed a Letter of Intent with Southwind RAS, a leading recycler in the Midwest, to collaborate on regional facility deployment and feedstock supply.
    • Engaged TAR360 to accelerate the company’s growth trajectory, optimize internal processes, and support execution across key operational initiatives.

    Commentary by David Sealock, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, and Darryl Delwo, Chief Financial Officer of Sky Quarry

    “We are pleased with the continued growth across our operations and the progress we’ve made in the first quarter of 2025 toward executing our waste-to-energy strategy, which is central to our mission of transforming recycled asphalt shingles into sustainably produced fuels and other valuable materials. At PR Spring, asset upgrades are nearing completion, and once commissioned, the site will activate our fully integrated production model and enable commercial-scale output.

    As part of our national expansion strategy, we signed non-binding Letters of Intent with Southwind RAS in the Midwest and R & R Solutions in the Southwest. These LOIs represent an early step in evaluating potential partnerships that could expand Sky Quarry’s geographic footprint and provide access to more than 1.5 million tons of asphalt shingle supply annually. If advanced, these relationships could unlock new revenue opportunities through facility development, expanded processing capacity, and the sale of high-value materials such as recycled liquid asphalt, blended fuels, and other products derived from waste asphalt shingles.

    We’re seeing the impact of operational improvements made in 2024 at the Foreland Refinery, with a 50% increase in revenue from Q4 2024 to Q1 2025 as output stabilized and product volumes rebounded.

    To build on this momentum, we engaged TAR360 to further optimize operations at Foreland. While we’re encouraged by recent performance gains, our shared goal is to increase throughput by up to 400% over time, scaling from our current 20,000 barrels per month to as much as 100,000. Achieving this level of production would enhance operating leverage, expand margins, and drive stronger profitability.

    With these improvements and additional efficiencies underway, we believe Foreland is positioned to play a key role in meeting growing fuel demand across the Western U.S. California’s refining capacity is expected to decline by 21% in a single year due to major facility closures, while global price spreads and supply constraints are creating price dislocations that make local refining more competitive. As market conditions continue to evolve, we are executing with purpose by scaling production, improving performance, and positioning Sky Quarry for a strong 2025.”

    Financial Results for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2025

    Total revenues for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025, were approximately $6.3 million, down from $11.0 million in the same period of 2024. This decline was primarily driven by ongoing challenges in reestablishing supply streams following the Foreland Refinery outage and refurbishment in mid-2024. In addition, lower commodity prices contributed to the decrease, with WTI crude falling from $87 per barrel in April 2024 to $71 per barrel at the end of Q1 2025.

    Gross profit for the quarter was negative $726,000, compared to a gross profit of $569,000 in the prior-year period.

    Total operating expenses increased to $1.94 million in Q1 2025, up from $1.61 million in Q1 2024, reflecting higher general and administrative costs, non-cash share-based compensation, and depreciation.

    As a result, the Company reported a net loss of $3.3 million for the first quarter of 2025, compared to a net loss of $2.5 million in the same period last year.

    Net cash used in operating activities for the three months ended March 31, 2025, was approximately $2.0 million, compared to $1.2 million for the same period in 2024.

    About Sky Quarry Inc.

    Sky Quarry Inc. (NASDAQ:SKYQ) and its subsidiaries are, collectively, an oil production, refining, and a development-stage environmental remediation company formed to deploy technologies to facilitate the recycling of waste asphalt shingles and remediation of oil-saturated sands and soils. Our waste-to-energy mission is to repurpose and upcycle millions of tons of asphalt shingle waste, diverting them from landfills. By doing so, we can contribute to improved waste management, promote resource efficiency, conserve natural resources, and reduce environmental impact. For more information, please visit skyquarry.com.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release may include ”forward-looking statements.” All statements pertaining to our future financial and/or operating results, future events, or future developments may constitute forward-looking statements. The statements may be identified by words such as “expect,” “look forward to,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “seek,” “estimate,” “will,” “project,” or words of similar meaning. Such statements are based on the current expectations and certain assumptions of our management, of which many are beyond our control. These are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties, and factors, including but not limited to those described in our disclosures. Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize or should underlying expectations not occur or assumptions prove incorrect, actual results, performance, or our achievements may (negatively or positively) vary materially from those described explicitly or implicitly in the relevant forward-looking statement. We neither intend, nor assume any obligation, to update or revise these forward-looking statements in light of developments which differ from those anticipated. You are urged to carefully review and consider any cautionary statements and the Company’s other disclosures, including the statements made under the heading “Risk Factors” and elsewhere in the Company’s Form 10-K as filed with the SEC on March 31, 2025. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of the document in which they are contained.

    Investor Relations
    Jennifer Standley
    Director of Investor Relations
    Ir@skyquarry.com

    Company Website
    www.skyquarry.com

    Sky Quarry Inc.
    Consolidated Balance Sheets
    As of March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024
     
        March 31, 
    2025
      December 31,
    2024
             
    ASSETS        
             
    Current assets:        
    Cash   $ 213,000   $ 385,116
    Accounts receivables     1,758,159     1,123,897
    Prepaid expenses and other assets     641,427     339,124
    Inventory     2,103,379     3,149,236
    Total current assets     4,715,965     4,997,373
             
    Property, plant, and equipment     5,942,782     6,160,318
    Oil and gas properties     8,832,356     8,534,967
    Restricted cash     798,851     2,929,797
    Right-of-use asset     1,091,656     1,115,785
    Goodwill     3,209,003     3,209,003
             
    Total assets   $ 24,590,613   $ 26,947,243
    LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY        
             
    Current liabilities:        
    Accounts payable and accrued expenses   $ 3,233,613     $ 4,046,319  
    Current portion of operating lease liability     81,775       38,422  
    Current portion of finance lease liability     16,626       16,120  
    Warrant liability     184,087       459,067  
    Lines of credit     2,328,127       1,260,727  
    Current maturities of notes payable     6,164,310       6,578,017  
    Total current liabilities     12,008,538       12,398,672  
             
    Notes payable, less current maturities, net of debt issuance costs     1,999,999       2,000,560  
    Operating lease liability, net of current portion     15,613       77,824  
    Finance lease Liability, net of current portion     987,018       971,690  
    Total Liabilities     15,011,168       15,448,746  
             
    Commitments and contingencies        
             
    Shareholders’ Equity:        
    Preferred stock $0.001 par value: 25,000,000 shares authorized; 0 shares issued and outstanding as of March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively            
    Common stock $0.0001 par value: 100,000,000 shares authorized: 21,260,924 and 19,027,208 shares issued and outstanding as of March 31, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively     2,126       1,903  
    Additional paid in capital     37,088,388       35,674,391  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss     (209,286 )     (209,708 )
    Accumulated deficit     (27,301,783 )     (23,968,089 )
    Total shareholders’ equity     9,579,445       11,498,497  
             
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity   $ 24,590,613     $ 26,947,243  
    Sky Quarry Inc.
    Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Loss
    For the Periods Ended March 31, 2025 and 2024
                     
          Three Months Ended March 31, 2025       Three Months Ended March 31, 2024
    Net sales     $ 6,332,967         $ 10,952,330  
                   
    Cost of goods sold       7,059,059           10,382,881  
    Gross Margin       (726,092 )         569,449  
                   
    Operating expenses:              
    General and administrative       1,935,457           1,607,884  
    Depreciation and amortization       2,028           1,472  
    Total Operating expenses       1,937,485           1,609,356  
                   
    Loss from operations       (2,663,577 )         (1,039,907 )
                   
    Other income (expense):              
    Interest expense       (872,468 )         (1,308,445 )
    Loss on extinguishment of debt       (85,753 )         (108,887 )
    Gain on warrant valuation       274,980            
    Other income (expense)       7,477           (5,306 )
    Gain on sale of assets       5,647            
    Other expense, net       (670,117 )         (1,422,638 )
                   
    Loss before provision for income taxes       (3,333,694 )         (2,462,545 )
                   
    Provision for income taxes                  
                   
    Net loss       (3,333,694 )         (2,462,545 )
                   
    Other comprehensive income (loss)              
    Exchange gain (loss) on translation of foreign operations       422           (8,134 )
                   
    Net loss and comprehensive loss     $ (3,333,272 )       $ (2,470,679 )
                   
    Loss per common share              
    Basic and diluted     $ (0.16 )       $ (0.15 )
    Weighted average shares outstanding              
    Basic and diluted       21,264,725           16,334,862  
    Sky Quarry Inc.
    Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
    For the Three Months Ended March 31, 2025 and 2024
     
          2025       2024  
             
    CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES        
    Net loss   $ (3,333,694 )   $ (2,462,545 )
    Adjustments to reconcile net loss to cash used in operating activities:        
    Share based compensation     78,880       270,176  
    Depreciation and amortization     242,004       164,534  
    Amortization of debt issuance costs     765,793       1,166,227  
    Amortization of right-of-use asset     24,129       21,952  
    Gain on revaluation of warrant liabilities     (274,980 )      
    Loss on extinguishment of debt     56,660       108,887  
    Gain on sale of assets     (5,647 )      
             
    Changes in operating assets and liabilities:        
    Accounts receivable     (634,263 )     (766,259 )
    Prepaid expenses and other assets     (302,302 )     (323,750 )
    Inventory     1,045,857       203,235  
    Accounts payable and accrued expenses     373,889       371,043  
    Operating lease liability     450       21,952  
    Net cash used in operating activities     (1,963,224 )     (1,224,548 )
             
    CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES        
             
    Proceeds from sale of assets     14,060        
    Purchase of exploration and evaluation assets     (297,389 )     (144,964 )
    Purchase of property, plant, and equipment     (32,881 )     (282,702 )
    Net cash used in investing activities     (316,210 )     (427,666 )
             
    CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES        
             
    Proceeds on lines of credit     5,339,736       10,641,448  
    Payments on lines of credit     (4,272,336 )     (11,638,704 )
    Proceeds from note payable     143,237       9,820,288  
    Payments on note payable     (1,231,214 )     (5,300,608 )
    Warrants Issued (net against payment of debt issuance costs)          
    Debt discount on note payable         (1,970,936 )
    Payments on finance lease     (3,473 )     (19,851 )
    Proceeds on issuance of preferred stock         197,500  
    Preferred stock offering costs         (40,870 )
    Proceeds on issuance of common stock         19,492  
    Common stock offering costs          
    Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities     (24,050 )     1,707,755  
             
    Effect of exchange rate on cash     422       (8,134 )
             
    Increase (decrease) in cash and restricted cash     (2,303,062 )     47,407  
    Cash and restricted cash, beginning of the period     3,314,913       4,680,836  
             
    Cash and restricted cash, end of the period   $ 1,011,851     $ 4,728,243  

    The MIL Network

  • 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

  • MIL-OSI: Calfrac Announces Voting Results of Election of Directors

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CALGARY, Alberta, May 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Calfrac Well Services Ltd. (“Calfrac”) (TSX–CFW) is pleased to announce the voting results of the election of directors at its annual meeting of shareholders held today. Each of the nominees proposed as a director were elected as directors to hold office until the next annual meeting of shareholders, or until their successors are elected or appointed. Detailed results of the voting for each nominee are set out below, and the full results on all matters voted upon at the meeting will be filed on Calfrac’s profile on SEDAR+ (www.sedarplus.ca).

    Nominee Votes For Votes Against
    Number % Number %
    Ronald P. Mathison 65,434,357 99.65 228,492 0.35
    Douglas R. Ramsay 65,447,107 99.67 215,742 0.33
    George S. Armoyan 63,552,876 96.79 2,109,973 3.21
    Anuroop Duggal 60,951,751 92.83 4,711,098 7.17
    Charles Pellerin 61,770,588 94.07 3,892,261 5.93
    Chetan Mehta 65,638,359 99.96 24,490 0.04
    Holly A. Benson 65,621,974 99.94 40,875 0.06

    Calfrac’s common shares are publicly traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange under the trading symbol “CFW”.

    Calfrac provides specialized oilfield services to exploration and production companies designed to increase the production of hydrocarbons from wells with continuing operations focused throughout North America and Argentina. The Company executes on its brand promise of “Do It Safely, Do It Right, Do It Profitably” to generate long-term, sustainable returns for its shareholders.

    Further information regarding Calfrac Well Services Ltd., including the most recently filed Annual Information Form, can be accessed on Calfrac’s website at www.calfrac.com or under the Company’s public filings found at www.sedarplus.ca. For further information on this press release, please contact:

    Michael Olinek
    Chief Financial Officer
    (403) 234-6673
    Suite 500, 407 – 8 Avenue S.W.
    Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2P 1E5

    Website: www.calfrac.com

    The MIL Network

  • 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

  • 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.

    ###

    The full letter can be found HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • 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

  • MIL-OSI Security: Texas woman sent to federal prison for transporting drugs into the United States

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    LAREDO, Texas – A 29-year-old San Antonio resident has been sentenced for the attempted importation of methamphetamine, announced U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Ganjei.

    Shania Nichele Ellis pleaded guilty Dec. 18, 2024.

    U.S. District Judge John A. Kazen has now ordered Ellis to serve 97 months in federal prison to be immediately followed by five years of supervised release. At the hearing, the court heard additional testimony that detailed how Ellis knew she was going to Mexico to move narcotics for money. In handing down the sentence, the court noted Ellis made a terrible decision.

    On Aug. 25, 2024, Ellis drove from Mexico to the Gateway to the Americas International Bridge 1 in Laredo and entered the trusted traveler lane. Authorities subsequently referred her to secondary inspection after learning she was not enrolled in that program.

    There, they discovered a small access door on the rear liftgate which revealed several bundles of narcotics. A K9 also alerted to the vehicle’s doors where more bundles were hidden inside the panels.

    Law enforcement ultimately found a total of 44 bundles of methamphetamine, weighing 24.407 kilograms with a 97% purity level as well as two bundles of cocaine weighing 655.6 grams and one bundle of black heroin weighing 494.5 grams.

    The investigation revealed that a friend had attempted to recruit her via social media to transport the narcotics from Mexico to the United States. While visiting that friend in Monterrey, Mexico, her car went missing. It was returned the following day when she was told to leave.

    As part of her plea, she admitted she conspired with at least one other person to import narcotics across the border from Mexico into the United States.

    She has been and will remain in custody pending transfer to a Federal Bureau of Prisons facility to be determined in the near future.

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement – Homeland Security Investigations and Customs and Border Protection conducted the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew P. Hakala-Finch prosecuted the case.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Additional 12 Defendants Charged in RICO Conspiracy for over $263 Million Cryptocurrency Thefts, Money Laundering, Home Break-Ins

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    WASHINGTON – A four-count superseding indictment, unsealed today in U.S. District Court, charges 12 additional people – Americans and foreign nationals – for allegedly participating in a cyber-enabled racketeering conspiracy throughout the United States and abroad that netted them more than $263 million. Several were arrested this week in California, while two remain abroad and are believed to be living in Dubai.

    The superseding indictment and the arrests were announced by U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro, FBI Special Agent in Charge Sean Ryan of the Washington Field Office Criminal and Cyber Division, and Executive Special Agent in Charge Kareem A. Carter of the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation Washington, D.C. Field Office.

    The defendants, listed below, face charges that include RICO conspiracy, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice. The superseding indictment adds charges originally brought against Malone Lam on Sept. 19, 2024.

    According to the superseding indictment, the enterprise began no later than October 2023 and continued through March 2025. It grew from friendships developed on online gaming platforms.

    Members of the enterprise held different responsibilities. The various roles included database hackers, organizers, target identifiers, callers, money launderers, and residential burglars targeting hardware virtual currency wallets.

    Database hackers hacked websites and servers to obtain cryptocurrency-related databases or purchased databases on the darkweb. Organizers and target identifiers organized and collated information across the databases to determine the most valuable targets. Callers cold-called victims and used social engineering to convince them their accounts were the subject of cyberattacks and the enterprise callers were attempting to help secure their accounts. Money launderers received the stolen crypto currency and turned it into fiat U.S. currency in the form of bulk cash or wire transfers.

    According to the indictment, members and associates of the enterprise used the stolen virtual currency to purchase, among other things, nightclub services ranging up to $500,000 per evening, luxury handbags valued in the tens of thousands of dollars that were given away at nightclub parties, luxury watches valued between $100,000 and $500,000, luxury clothing valued in the tens of thousands of dollars, rental homes in Los Angeles, the Hamptons, and Miami, private jet rentals, a team of private security guards, and a fleet of at least 28 exotic cars ranging in value from $100,000 to $3.8 million.

    According to the indictment, members of the enterprise laundered stolen cryptocurrency proceeds by moving the funds through various mixers and exchanges using “peel chains,” pass-through wallets, and virtual private networks to mask their true identities. 

    The indictment alleges that in one instance on Aug. 18, 2024, Malone Lam and contacted a victim in D.C. and, through the communications with that victim, fraudulently obtained over 4,100 Bitcoin — worth over $230 million at the time. In another instance in July 2024, Malone Lam and others are accused of stealing over $14 million in cryptocurrency from an additional victim.

    The indictment alleges that members of the enterprise also committed home break-ins. As alleged in the Indictment, Marlon Ferro traveled to New Mexico in July 2024 and broke into a victim’s home to steal their hardware virtual currency wallet while Lam monitored the victim’s location by logging into his iCloud account.

    The superseding indictment also alleges that the enterprise engaged in significant money laundering activity. Kunal Mehta, Hamza Doost, Joel Cortez, and Evan Tangeman are alleged to have engaged in unlicensed crypto-to-cash services for the enterprise, obtained luxury rental homes for members of the enterprise using fake identity documents, booked private jet travel with stolen cryptocurrency for the enterprise, concealed ownership of exotic cars by registering them in shell company names, and shipped bulk cash through US mail to members of the enterprise hidden in squishmallow stuffed animals.

    Following his arrest in September 2024 and continuing while in pretrial detention, Lam is alleged to have continued working with members of the enterprise to pass and receive directions, collect stolen cryptocurrency, and to have enterprise members buy luxury Hermes Birkin bags and hand deliver them to his girlfriend in Miami, Florida.

    This ongoing investigation is being handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, the FBI’s Washington Field Office, and the IRS-Criminal Investigation Washington D.C. Field Office. Significant investigative and operational support was provided by the FBI’s Los Angeles and Miami field offices.

    The matter is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Kevin Rosenberg, Acting Deputy Chief of the Fraud, Public Corruption, and Civil Rights Section of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia.

    If found guilty, the defendants’ sentences will be determined by the court based on the advisory Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    An indictment is merely an allegation and all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    Defendants

    NAME, AGE, & ALLEGED ROLE AKAs HOMETOWN CHARGES
    Malone Lam, 20, Social Engineering, Organizer “King Greavys,” “$$$,” “7,” “Kg,” “Anne Hathaway”

    Miami, Florida,

    Los Angeles, Calif.,

    Singapore

    RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    Marlon Ferro, 19, Money Laundering, Residential Burglary “Marlo,” “GothFerrari” Santa Ana, California RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    Hamza Doost, 21, Money Laundering “Scyllia” Hayward, California RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    Conor Flansburg, 21,   Database Hacker, Caller, and Organizer “O O,” “Green Room,” “@d0uu0b” Newport Beach, California RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud
    Kunal Mehta, 45, Money Laundering “Papa,” “The Accountant,” “Shrek,” “Neil” Irvine, California RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    Ethan Yarally, 18, Caller “Rand,” “15%” Richmond Hill, New York RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud
    Cody Demirtas, 19, Caller “KO,” “Kody” Stuart, Florida RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud
    Aakash Anand, 22, Caller, Money Laundering “Light,” “Dark” New Zealand RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    Evan Tangeman, 21, Money Laundering “E,” “Tate,” “Evan | Exchanger” Newport Beach, California RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    Joel Cortes, 21, Money Laundering “J” Laguna Niguel, California RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    First Name Unknown-1 , Last Name Unknown-1, Database Hacker “Chen,” “Squiggly” Unknown RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    First Name Unknown-2 , Last Name Unknown-2, Database Hacker “Danny” “Meech” Unknown RICO Conspiracy, Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud, Conspiracy to Launder Monetary Instruments
    John Tucker Desmond, 19, Destroyed Evidence

    Huntington Beach, California Obstruction of Justice

    24cr417

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Two Foreign Nationals Arrested in Vermont Border-Crossing Event

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Burlington, Vermont – The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Vermont stated that on May 13, 2025, Emmanuel Pierre Andre Irene, 26, and Erika Brezault, 23, citizens of Haiti, were arrested by the United States Border Patrol in the town of Troy, Vermont. Both were charged by criminal complaints—Irene with illegally entering the United States as an alien, and Brezault with transporting Irene in furtherance of his illegal entry. Irene and Brezault both appeared on May 14, 2025, before United States Magistrate Judge Kevin J. Doyle, who ordered that Brezault be released on conditions of pretrial supervision pending further proceedings. Judge Doyle accepted Irene’s plea of guilty to illegal entry and sentenced Irene to a time-served sentence.

    According to court records, around 1:00 am on May 13, 2025, one individual was observed walking south in Canada on a road that reaches the United States border; later, at approximately 3:30 am, one individual was observed walking south in the United States in an area close to that Canadian road, approximately a half-mile south of the international border. U.S. Border Patrol agents and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) agents responded to the scene to search for the suspected illegal entrant in the area of Mud Creek, approximately two miles east of the village of North Troy, Vermont. At approximately 9:23 am, an HSI agent made contact with a Massachusetts-plated vehicle that had been pulled over to the side of Bear Mountain Road, and he spoke with the two occupants. The driver was later identified as Brezault, and the passenger was later identified as Irene. They told the agent they were from Haiti and were now living in Worchester, Massachusetts. A uniformed Border Patrol agent joined the HSI agent, and they spoke with Brezault and Irene, who both claimed to have Temporary Protected Status in the United States. After an agent pointed out Irene’s wet, muddy clothing and informing them of the camera images of the male subject approaching and then being south of the international border, Irene admitted to entering the United States from Canada by walking through the woods. Brezault also admitted to picking up Irene after he crossed into the United States. Both defendants were detained and later charged with the respective offenses.

    The United States Attorney’s Office emphasizes that the complaint contains allegations only and that Brezault is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty. Brezault faces up to five years’ imprisonment if convicted. The actual sentence, however, would be determined by the District Court with guidance from the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines and the statutory sentencing factors.

    Acting United States Attorney Michael P. Drescher commended the investigatory efforts of the United States Border Patrol and Homeland Security Investigations.

    The prosecutor is Assistant United States Attorney Matthew Lasher. Brezault is represented by Assistant Federal Public Defender Emily Kenyon, and Irene was represented by Karen Shingler, Esq.

    This case is part of Operation Take Back America a nationwide initiative that marshals the full resources of the Department of Justice to repel the invasion of illegal immigration, achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations (TCOs), and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime. Operation Take Back America streamlines efforts and resources from the Department’s Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETFs) and Project Safe Neighborhood (PSN).

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: FSI ANNOUNCES FIRST QUARTER, 2025 FINANCIAL RESULTS

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    A CONFERENCE CALL IS SCHEDULED FOR FRIDAY, MAY 16, 2025, 11:00AM EASTERN TIME

    SEE DIAL IN NUMBER BELOW

    TABER, ALBERTA, May 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — FLEXIBLE SOLUTIONS INTERNATIONAL, INC. (NYSE Amex: FSI), is the developer and manufacturer of biodegradable polymers for oil extraction, detergent ingredients and water treatment as well as crop nutrient availability chemistry. Flexible Solutions also manufactures biodegradable and environmentally safe water and energy conservation technologies. FSI is also increasing its presense in the food and nutrition supplement manufacturing markets. Today the Company announces financial results for first quarter ended March 31, 2025.

    Mr. Daniel B. O’Brien, CEO, states, “The customers who adjusted inventory in Q1 returned to normal order patterns in April.” Mr. O’Brien continues, “ENP also saw lower revenue, which has rebounded in Q2 and we had lower investment income as a result of reduced ownership in the FL LLC.”

    • Sales for the first quarter (Q1) were $7,473,692 down approximately 19% when compared to sales of $9,224,872 in the corresponding period a year ago.
    • Q1, 2025 net income (loss) was ($277,734), or ($0.02) compared to a net income of $457,226, or $0.04 per share, in Q1, 2024.
    • The lower earnings reported for Q1, 2025 were due to lower sales volume, higher cost of goods including higher tariffs. Some costs that are needed for the CAPEX get classified as expenses and are set against current income. Our costs for the Panama factory have similar accounting effects.
    • Basic weighted average shares used in computing earnings per share amounts were 12,587,476 and 12,449,699 for Q1, 2025 and Q1, 2024 respectively.
    • Q1, 2025 Non-GAAP operating cash flow: The Company shows 3 months operating cash flow of $480,268, or $0.04 per share. This compares with operating cash flow of $1,382,874, or $0.11 per share, in the corresponding 3 months of 2024 (see the table and notes that follow for details of these calculations).

    The NanoChem division and ENP subsidiary continue to be the dominant sources of revenue and cash flow for the Company. New opportunities continue to unfold in detergent, water treatment, oil field extraction, turf, ornamental and agricultural use to further increase sales in these divisions. More recently, opportunities in the food and nutrition supplement manufacturing markets have emerged.

    CONFERENCE CALL

    A conference call has been scheduled for 11:00 am Eastern Time, 8:00 am Pacific Time, on Friday May 16th, 2025. CEO, Dan O’Brien will be presenting and answering questions on the conference call. To participate in this call please dial 1-888-999-5318 (or 1-848-280-6460) just prior to the scheduled call time. To join the call participants will be requested to give their name and company affiliation. The conference ID: SOLUTIONS and/or call title Flexible Solutions International – First Quarter, 2025 Financials may be requested

    The above information and following table contain supplemental information regarding income and cash flow from operations for the period ended March 31, 2025. Adjustments to exclude depreciation, stock option expenses and one time charges are given. This financial information is a Non-GAAP financial measure as defined by SEC regulation G. The GAAP financial measure most directly comparable is net income.

    The reconciliation of each Non-GAAP financial measure is as follows:

    FLEXIBLE SOLUTIONS INTERNATIONAL, INC.
    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
    FOR THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 2025 AND 2024
    (THREE MONTHS OPERATING CASH FLOW – UNAUDITED)

        THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31  
        2025     2024  
    Revenue   $ 7,473,692     $ 9,224,872  
    Income (loss) before income tax – GAAP   $ (153,678 )   $ 780,387  
    Provision for Income tax – net – GAAP   $ (110,363 )   $ (264,178 )
    Net income (loss) – GAAP   $ (277,734 )   $ 457,226  
    Net income (loss) per common share – basic. – GAAP   $ (0.02 )   $ 0.04  
    3 month weighted average shares used in computing per share amounts – basic.- GAAP     12,587,476       12,449,699  
           
          3 month Operating Cash Flow
    Ended March 31
    Operating Cash Flow (3 months). NON-GAAP      $ 480,268 a,b,c       $ 1,382,874 a,b,c  
    Operating Cash Flow per share excluding non-operating items and items not related to current operations (3 months) – basic. –NON-GAAP      $ 0.04 a,b,c       $ 0.11 a,b,c  
    Non-cash Adjustments (3 month) –GAAP      $ 563,118 d       $ 676,026 d  
    Shares (3 month basic weighted average) used in computing per share amounts – basic –GAAP     12,587,476       12,449,699  


    Notes
    : certain items not related to “operations” of the Company’s net income are listed below.

    a) Non-GAAP – Flexible Solutions International purchased 65% of ENP in 4th quarter, 2018 (October 2018). Therefore Operating Cash Flow is adjusted by the pre tax Net income or loss of the non-controlling interest in ENP for 2023 only. After 2023 the entry in the “Statement of operations and comprehensive income” is a pretax number therefore no adjustment is required.
    b) Non-GAAP – amounts exclude certain cash and non-cash items: Depreciation and Stock compensation expense (2025 = $563,118, 2024 = $676,026), Interest expense (2025 = $198,019, 2024 = $175,266), Interest income (2025 = 49,573, $2024 = $48,197), Loss on lease termination (2025 = N/A, 2024 = $41,350), Gain on investment (2025 = $63,925, 2024 = $182,975), Income tax expense (2025 = $110,363, 2024 = $264,178), and pretax Net income attributable to non-controlling interests (2025 = $13,693, 2024 = $58,983). These onetime expenditures were not related to operations of FSI. *See the financial statements for all adjustments.
    c) The revenue and gain from the 50% investment in the private Florida LLC announced in January 2019 are not treated as revenue or profit from operations by Flexible Solutions given the Company does not have control. The profit is treated as investment income and therefore occurs below Operating income in the Statement of Operations. In August 2024, the Company sold 30.1% of its holdings in the Florida LLC and currently has a 19.9% share, with a contract in place to sell the remainder over the next five years. As a result, the gains from all investments (2025 = $63,925, 2024 = $182,975), including those from the Florida LLC, are removed from the calculation to arrive at Operating Cash Flow
    d) Non-GAAP – amounts represent depreciation and stock compensation expense.

    SAFE HARBOR PROVISION

    The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 provides a “Safe Harbor” for forward-looking statements. Certain of the statements contained herein, which are not historical facts, are forward looking statement with respect to events, the occurrence of which involve risks and uncertainties. These forward-looking statements may be impacted, either positively or negatively, by various factors. Information concerning potential factors that could affect the company is detailed from time to time in the company’s reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Flexible Solutions International
    6001 54thAve, Taber, Alberta, CANADA T1G 1X4
    Company Contacts

    Jason Bloom
    Toll Free: 800 661 3560
    Fax: 403 223 2905
    E-mail: info@flexiblesolutions.com
                                            

    If you have received this news release by mistake or if you would like to be removed from our update list please reply to: info@flexiblesolutions.com

    To find out more information about Flexible Solutions and our products, please visit www.flexiblesolutions.com.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Terry Sanford to be Featured on N.C. Highway Historical Marker

    Source: US State of North Carolina

    Headline: Terry Sanford to be Featured on N.C. Highway Historical Marker

    Terry Sanford to be Featured on N.C. Highway Historical Marker
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    A man who served as governor, U.S. Senator and university president soon will be recognized with a North Carolina Highway Historical Marker. The N.C. Historical Marker Program is part of the N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources.

    The marker commemorating Terry Sanford will be unveiled Friday, May 23 at 11 a.m., during a roadside ceremony at the intersection of NC 751 and Science Drive in Durham.

    Sanford, who served as governor of North Carolina from 1961-65, also served his state and country in numerous roles throughout his public career.  

    Born Aug. 20, 1917, in Laurinburg, N.C., Sanford was the second of five children in a middle-class family. He attended Presbyterian Junior College (now St. Andrews Presbyterian College) and then the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, graduating from the latter in 1939. While at the UNC, Sanford met fellow student Margaret Rose Knight, whom he would marry in 1942, and the couple would have two children.

    Following graduation, Sanford entered the University of North Carolina School of Law. While continuing to study law, Sanford joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation in December 1941 and after training, he was assigned to duty in Ohio and Missouri. Following the entry of the United States into World War II, Sanford enlisted in the Army on the first anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor. He was assigned first to the 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment as a medic, and then to the 517th Parachute Infantry Regiment. In the latter regiment, he saw combat in Italy, southern France, and Belgium (the Battle of the Bulge).

    Following the war, Sanford reentered law school and graduated from the university in 1946. He was admitted to the state bar later in the year. Already entertaining ambitions to one day run for governor, he became assistant director of the University of North Carolina’s Institute of Government before becoming a full-time attorney in Fayetteville. He also served as a captain in the North Carolina Army National Guard.  

    A slow but steady rise in the Democratic Party of North Carolina and state government followed over the next few years, including a job in the North Carolina State Ports Authority, presidency of the North Carolina Young Democratic Clubs, state senator representing the 10th District, and campaign manager for former governor W. Kerr Scott’s successful 1954 run for the U.S. Senate, culminating with his successful run for governor in 1960.

    In December 1969, he was selected to be the new president of Duke University. Upon inauguration, he immediately ended a cap on the number of Jewish students who could be enrolled at the school. Facing a budget deficit and a small endowment, he worked to attract more students, increase enrollment, and increase annual donations. He also sought to improve relations between the student body and the administration, declaring opposition to the Vietnam War, supporting peaceful protest, and increasing student involvement in administration operations. He established the Institute of Policy Studies and Public Affairs, now the Sanford School of Public Policy.

    In 1986, Sanford was elected to the U.S. Senate. He supported efforts to bring about an end to the civil war in Nicaragua and created an International Commission for Central American Recovery and Development to promote regional development under the oversight of the Center for International Development Research at Duke University. As in the case of the North Carolina Fund, the commission would be funded by private philanthropy. The commission became informally known as the “Sanford Commission,” although he was not a member. He also participated in efforts to recruit Democratic candidates for the 1988 presidential election. He ran for reelection in 1992 but lost to Republican candidate Lauch Faircloth.

    Sanford devoted his remaining years to law and teaching at Duke. He died of cancer at home on April 18, 1998, and was interred at Duke Chapel.

    For more information about the historical marker, please visit  https://www.dncr.nc.gov/blog/2024/07/10/terry-sanford-1917-1998-g-144, or call (919) 814-6625  

    The Highway Historical Marker Program is a collaboration between the N.C. departments of Natural and Cultural Resources and Transportation.

    About the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources
    The N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources (DNCR) manages, promotes, and enhances the things that people love about North Carolina – its diverse arts and culture, rich history, and spectacular natural areas. Through its programs, the department enhances education, stimulates economic development, improves public health, expands accessibility, and strengthens community resiliency.

    The department manages over 100 locations across the state, including 27 historic sites, seven history museums, two art museums, five science museums, four aquariums, 35 state parks, four recreation areas, dozens of state trails and natural areas, the North Carolina Zoo, the State Library, the State Archives, the N.C. Arts Council, the African American Heritage Commission, the American Indian Heritage Commission, the State Historic Preservation Office, the Office of State Archaeology, the Highway Historical Markers program, the N.C. Land and Water Fund, and the Natural Heritage Program. For more information, please visit www.dncr.nc.gov.
    May 15, 2025

    MIL OSI USA News