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Category: Latin America

  • MIL-OSI: Banco Itaú Chile Reschedules First Quarter 2025 Financial Results Conference Call

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SANTIAGO, Chile, April 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BANCO ITAÚ CHILE (SSE: ITAUCL) announced today that its conference call to discuss the financial results of the first quarter 2025 will be held on Thursday, May 8, 2025, at 9:00 A.M. Santiago time (9:00 A.M. ET). The conference call will be hosted by the by André Gailey, CEO; Emiliano Muratore, CFO; and Andrés Perez, Chief Economist.

    The results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025 will be released before the market opens in Santiago, on April 30, 2025.

    Webinar Details:

    Online registration: 

    https://mzgroup.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_jun0W4C_RSCXLRHeMsyD4A#/registration

    All participants must pre-register using this link to join the webinar. Upon registering, each participant will be provided with details to connect to the call.

    Q&A session:

    The Q&A session will be available for participants through the webinar, where attendees will be allowed to present their questions – we will answer selected questions verbally.

    Investor Relations – Itaú Chile

    IR@itau.cl / ir.itau.cl

    The MIL Network –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: ICE and U.S. Border Patrol assist in local sex crime investigation involving previously deported illegal alien

    Source: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

    HOUGHTON LAKE, Mich – U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Border Patrol assisted the Roscommon County Sheriff’s Office in the investigation and arrest of an illegal alien accused of raping an 18-year-old girl April 25.

    ICE Homeland Security Investigations Traverse City special agents and USBP agents from USBP Station Sault Ste Marie assisted in the apprehension of Leocado Hernandez-Garcia, an illegal alien from Mexico who has been removed from the United States twice.

    Hernadez-Garcia faces five felony counts of criminal sexual conduct.

    Hernandez-Garcia was deported from the United States in 2014. He was encountered again in 2023 and expelled under Title 42. He reentered the United States a third time at unknown date and location without inspection by an immigration official.

    “ICE HSI Detroit is committed to assisting our local partners like the Roscommon County Sheriff’s Office on crimes involving illegal aliens in their jurisdiction,” said ICE HSI Detroit acting Special Agent in Charge Jared Murphey. “Our thoughts are with the victim at this time, and we hope that these recent steps toward justice and accountability can help her on the road to recovery and healing.”

    “This is another example of the results we achieve through strong partnerships with our local and federal law enforcement agencies,” said Javier Geronimo, Jr., Detroit Sector Acting Chief Patrol Agent. “Thanks to this collaboration, a repeat immigration offender accused of raping a teenager is now under arrest, along with two other illegal aliens. We remain committed to protecting our community through teamwork and vigilance.”

    The Roscommon County Sheriff’s Office investigation remains ongoing with the continued assistance of ICE HSI and USBP.

    ICE HSI and USBP encountered two additional illegal aliens during this investigation that were taken into custody pending immigration proceedings.

    ICE established the Victims Of Immigration Crime Engagement (VOICE) Office to acknowledge and serve the needs of victims and families who have been affected by crimes committed by individuals with a nexus to immigration violations.

    The VOICE has a toll-free hotline staffed by operators to ensure victims receive the support they need. The number is 1-855-48-VOICE.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Mexico

    Source:

    We continue to advise reconsider your need to travel to the states of Chihuahua, Sinaloa, Guanajuato, Sonora, Colima and Chiapas. There are lower levels within some of these locations. See our advice level summary for details.

    Plan your travel carefully. Don’t travel at night outside major cities. Use major toll roads wherever possible or access cities directly by air travel. Other travel options and routes may have higher security risks (see ‘Safety).

    If you have an ordinary passport with a chip, you can use the e-gates located at the airports of Mexico City, San Jose del Cabo, and Cancun. You’ll receive your FMM (Multiple Immigration Form) printed, which authorises Australians to stay for 180 days exclusively for tourism purposes.

    If you don’t have an ordinary passport with a chip, and you’re visiting for 180 days or less as a tourist, you’ll receive a visa on arrival. Mexican authorities advise to avoid being detained or deported, you must complete an online Multiple Immigration Form (FMM) and obtain a QR code (see ‘Travel’).

    MIL OSI News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: April 28th, 2025 Heinrich, Luján Introduce Legislation to Build More Homes for New Mexicans, Reduce Homelessness

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Mexico Martin Heinrich

    WASHINGTON — U.S. Senators Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) and Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) introduced the Housing for All Act, legislation to address the housing shortage and homelessness crises in New Mexico. If passed, the bill will invest in proven solutions to address housing shortages and provide a historic level of federal funding for programs to bolster innovative, locally developed solutions to increase the housing stock in the state and help New Mexicans experiencing homelessness.
    As the Trump Administration undermines and defunds critical housing services across the country — including illegal staff cuts at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and potential closures of nearly two-thirds of HUD field offices nationwide — investments to boost the affordable housing stock and reduce homelessness are essential.
    “Housing costs in New Mexico and across the country are out of control. The solution is simple: we need to build and renovate more homes. And we need to provide our community leaders with the financial support necessary to carry out this important work,” said Heinrich. “While Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s “DOGE” boys gut housing services that help New Mexicans keep a roof over their head, I’m focused on boosting essential programs that increase the housing stock, lower costs, and help hardworking families get ahead.”
    “In New Mexico and across the country, far too many Americans lack access to affordable housing options and are experiencing homelessness,” said Senator Luján. “As housing programs and services face ongoing attacks and funding cuts, the need to expand affordable housing options has never been greater. That’s why I’m proud to introduce this legislation to address housing shortages and help end homelessness in New Mexico.”
    Across New Mexico, there is a shortage of rental homes affordable and available to households whose incomes are at or below the poverty line or 30% of their area median income. And, according to a January 2024 survey conducted by the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness, 4,649 people experienced homelessness in New Mexico on a night in January. Furthermore, half of New Mexico’s lower-income renters spend more than 30% of their income on housing costs, including utilities.
    Heinrich and Luján’s Housing for All Act takes an all-hands-on-deck approach to combat these crises, including historic investments from the federal government in housing solutions. 
    Addressing the Affordable Housing Shortage
    The Housing for All Act addresses the affordable housing shortage by investing in federal housing programs, including:
    Addressing the Homelessness Crisis
    The Housing for All Act addresses the homelessness crisis by investing in:

    Housing Choice Vouchers

    These vouchers help low-income families, elderly persons, veterans and disabled individuals afford housing in the private market.

    This program connects families and individuals to rapid re-housing assistance, emergency shelter, and homelessness prevention.

    Supporting Innovative and Locally Developed Approaches
    The Housing for All Act supports innovative and locally developed approaches by investing in:
    A one-page summary of the bill is here.
    A section-by-section summary of the bill is here.
    The text of the bill is here. 
    For a list of Heinrich’s actions to lower housing costs and tackle the housing shortage in New Mexico, click here.
    For a list of Luján’s actions to lower housing costs and tackle the housing shortage in New Mexico, click here.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: 1 billion years ago, a meteorite struck Scotland and influenced life on Earth

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Chris Kirkland, Professor of Geochronology, Curtin University

    Stoer Head lighthouse, Scotland. William Gale/Shutterstock

    We’ve discovered that a meteorite struck northwest Scotland 1 billion years ago, 200 million years later than previously thought. Our results are published today in the journal Geology.

    This impact now aligns with some of Earth’s earliest known, land based, non-marine microbial fossils, and offers new insights into how meteorite strikes may have shaped our planet’s environment and life.

    A rocky treasure trove

    The Torridonian rocks of northwest Scotland are treasured by geologists as some of the finest archives of the ancient lakes and river systems that existed a billion years ago.

    Those water bodies were home to microbial ecosystems consisting of eukaryotes. Eukaryotes are single-celled organisms with complex internal structures that are the ancestors of all plants and animals.

    But the Torridonian environments and their associated microbial communities were dramatically disrupted when a meteor slammed into the planet.

    A drone’s-eye view of the Stac Fada Member reveals towering blocks of sandstone preserving a meteorite impact frozen in time. Look closely and you’ll spot figures for scale, dwarfed by the chaotic jumble of rock fragments encased in impact-smashed debris.
    Tony Prave

    The record of this event is preserved in a geological unit known as the Stac Fada Member. It is comprised of unusual layers of rock fragments broken and melted by the impact.

    Also, crucially, there are shock-altered minerals that closely resemble those found in famous impact sites such as Chicxulub (Mexico) and Sudbury (Canada).

    In the case of the Stac Fada, these minerals were engulfed in high-energy, ground-hugging flows of smashed rock triggered by the impact that spread across the ancient landscape.

    What is exciting about our new date for the Stac Fada impact is that it now overlaps in age with microfossils preserved elsewhere in the Torridonian rocks.

    This raises some interesting questions. For example, how did the meteorite strike influence the environmental conditions those early non-marine microbial ecosystems relied on?

    Finding out the date

    Determining when a meteorite struck is no easy task.

    We can use minerals to constrain the age, but they have to be the right kind. In this case it means something that wasn’t overly altered by the intense heat, pressure and fluids generated by the impact, yet robust enough to survive the ravages of deep geological time.

    Suitable minerals are extremely rare, but we found a few in the Stac Fada rocks. One was reidite, a mineral that only forms under extreme pressure. The other was granular zircon, a uranium-bearing mineral formed by immense impact temperatures.

    Electron microscope image of a shocked zircon: blue is granular zircon, red is reidite formed under extreme pressure from a meteorite impact.
    Timmons Erickson

    These minerals are, in effect, tiny stopwatches whose clocks start “ticking” at the time they form. Although these clocks are often damaged during the impact and the ensuing pulse of heat, we used mathematical modelling to determine the most probable time of impact.

    Together, these techniques consistently pointed to an event 1 billion years old, not 1.2 billion years old as previously suggested. Given such vast spans of time, a 20% change in age might not seem dramatic.

    However, the new age shows the timing of the impact coincides with early non-marine eukaryotic fossils. It also lines up with a major mountain-building event. This means the Torridonian lifeforms had to cope with significant, environment-altering phenomena.

    Why this is important for you, me, and life in general

    The origin of life is a deeply complex process that likely began with a series of pre-biotic chemical reactions.

    While much remains unknown, it is intriguing that two ancient meteorite impacts, the 3.5-billion-year-old North Pole impact in Western Australia and now the 1-billion-year-old Stac Fada deposit in northwest Scotland, occur close in time to major milestones in the fossil record.

    The North Pole impact occurs in a sequence of rocks containing stromatolites, some of the oldest-known fossils considered to be indicative of microbial life.

    These rippled layers in the Torridon rocks were built by ancient microbial communities, evidence of some of the earliest life on land.
    Tony Prave

    All life requires energy. The earliest forms of life are thought to be associated with volcanic hydrothermal springs. Impacts offer a plausible alternative. The immediate aftermath of a meteorite strike is extreme and hostile, and would ruin your day. But the long-term effects could support key biological processes.

    Meteorite strikes fracture rocks, generate long-lived hydrothermal systems and form crater lakes that enable the concentration of important ingredients for life, such as clays, organic molecules and phosphorus. The latter is a key element for all forms of life.

    In Scotland, the Stac Fada impact lies within an ancient river and lake environment that housed microbial ecosystems colonising the land. What makes the Stac Fada impact deposits fascinating is that, unlike most other impacts on Earth, they preserve the environments in which those pioneering organisms lived immediately prior to the impact.

    Further, the impact deposits were subsequently buried as non-marine microbial habitats became reestablished. So, the Stac Fada rocks provide an opportunity to see how microbial life recovered from impact.

    Extraterrestrial visitors in the form of meteorite collisions may not just have scarred Earth’s surface, but shaped its future, turning catastrophic events into natural crater-cradles of life.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    – ref. 1 billion years ago, a meteorite struck Scotland and influenced life on Earth – https://theconversation.com/1-billion-years-ago-a-meteorite-struck-scotland-and-influenced-life-on-earth-254285

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: De La Cruz Secures Water for South Texans

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Monica De La Cruz (TX-15)

    De La Cruz Secures Water for South Texans

    WASHINGTON, April 28, 2025

    Today, Congresswoman Monica De La Cruz (TX-15) released the following statement on the Trump Administration’s announcement that the Government of Mexico will make immediate deliveries on the water South Texans are owed under the 1944 Water Treaty.

    “Today’s announcement is a win for South Texas communities. Since coming to Congress, I have worked tirelessly to deliver the water Texans are owed under the 1944 Water Treaty. After two years of being told nothing could be done, we finally have a President and an Administration that has shown strength and delivered. Thank you President Trump, Secretary Brooke Rollins, and Secretary Marco Rubio for your leadership on this issue. This is a positive step in the right direction and I look forward to continuing to deliver wins for South Texas agriculture.” – Congresswoman Monica De La Cruz

    Background:

    Since entering Congress, Rep. De La Cruz has been a tireless leader in securing the water Texans are owed and prioritized holding the Government of Mexico accountable for the over one million acre-feet of water they owe the U.S. under the 1944 Water Treaty.

    Highlights of her work include:

    • May 4, 2023: Rep. De La Cruz led a bipartisan and bicameral letter to the Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, requesting for the Department to immediately engage with the International Boundary and Water Commission (IWBC) to ensure Mexico provides for immediate releases of water.
    • October 24, 2023: Rep. De La Cruz sent a letter to the Mexican Secretary of Foreign Affairs and the Mexican Ambassador to the United States, imploring Mexico to honor its 1944 water treaty with the United States.
    • November 28, 2023: Rep. De La Cruz’s bipartisan resolution, H.Res. 683, expressing support for the diplomatic relations required to encourage the Government of Mexico to fulfill its water deliveries under the 1944 Water Treaty.
    • December 1, 2023: Rep. De La Cruz sent a letter to Ambassador Moctezuma requesting that Mexico take immediate action on making water deliveries from their reserves to the United States.
    • January 31, 2024: Rep. De La Cruz sent a letter to Ambassador Moctezuma calling for the immediate release of water from Chihuahua.
    • February 23, 2024: Rep De La Cruz sent a letter to Secretary Blinken and Secretary of Agriculture Vilsack urging them to engage Mexico on this issue in order to achieve compliance with the terms of the treaty to secure water.
    • February 28, 2024: Rep. De La Cruz introduced H.R. 7468 to ensure that United States diplomats and officials of the U.S. Section of the International Boundary and Water Commission are able to advance efforts seeking compliance by the United Mexican States with the 1944 Treaty on Utilization of Waters of the Colorado and Tijuana Rivers and of the Rio Grande.
    • May 8, 2024: Rep. De La Cruz sent a letter to Secretary Blinken requesting information and an update on discussions regarding the status of water deliveries from Mexico.
    • May 10, 2024: Rep De La Cruz introduced H.R. 8344, the Texas Agricultural Producers Assistance Act to address the significant economic losses suffered by Texas agricultural producers due to Mexico’s failure to comply with water delivery obligations under the 1944 Water Treaty between the United States and Mexico. This critical legislation was included in the Farm Bill which passed out of the House Agriculture Committee with bipartisan support.
    • July 8th, 2024: Rep. De La Cruz sent a letter to Mexican President-Elect Claudia Sheinbaum requesting a meeting to address water deliveries owed to the United States.
    • August 6th, 2024: Rep. De La Cruz announced the formation of the South Texas Water Working Group, a collaborative effort aimed at addressing and resolving the water challenges faced by South Texas communities.
    • October 11th, 2024: Rep. De La Cruz introduced H.R. 9960, the Water Delivery Transparency Act to mandate the U.S. International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC) to host public forums, create an online portal for stakeholder input, and issue public reports detailing how this input will influence future treaty updates.
    • December 19, 2024: Rep. De La Cruz led a letter to President Trump requesting that he hold Mexico accountable for its water deliveries under the 1944 Water Treaty. Every Republican member of the Texas Congressional Delegation co-signed this letter.
    • December 20, 2024: Rep. De La Cruz secured language in the end-of-year Continuing Resolution granting the Secretary of Agriculture authority to provide block grants for economic relief to agricultural producers in South Texas.
    • January 28, 2025: Rep. De La Cruz introduced H.Res. 71 to condemn the  Government of Mexico for failing to fulfill its water deliveries on an annual basis to the United States under the treaty between the United States and Mexico regarding the utilization of the Colorado and Tijuana Rivers and of the Rio Grande.
    • February 5, 2025: Rep. De La Cruz sent a letter to Secretary Rubio requesting that he hold Mexico accountable for the water they owe the United States as part of their trade negotiations.
    • February 27, 2025: Rep. De La Cruz met with President Trump to advocate for holding Mexico accountable for owed water deliveries under the 1944 Water Treaty.
    • March 19, 2025: De La Cruz announced alongside U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Brooke Rollins and Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) that $280 million of aid funds will be deployed by the USDA to South Texas farmers.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA News: Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Protects American Communities from Criminal Aliens

    Source: The White House

    CRACKING DOWN ON SANCTUARY CITIES: Today, President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order to enforce federal law with respect to sanctuary jurisdictions to protect their citizens from dangerous illegal aliens.

    • The Order directs the Attorney General and Secretary of Homeland Security to publish a list of States and local jurisdictions obstructing federal immigration law enforcement and notify each sanctuary jurisdiction of its non-compliance, providing an opportunity to correct it.
    • Sanctuary jurisdictions that do not comply with federal law may lose federal funding.
    • The Order directs the Attorney General and Secretary of Homeland Security to pursue all necessary legal remedies and enforcement measures to bring non-compliant jurisdictions into compliance.
    • It instructs the Attorney General and Secretary of Homeland Security to develop mechanisms for proper eligibility verification in sanctuary jurisdictions to prevent illegal aliens from receiving federal public benefits.
    • The Order ensures illegal aliens are not being favored over American citizens by directing the Attorney General to address state or local laws that unlawfully prioritize aliens.
      • This includes in-state tuition benefits for aliens or criminal sentencing factors that favor aliens.

    ENFORCING FEDERAL LAW: President Trump believes it is imperative that the federal government restore the enforcement of United States immigration law to protect national sovereignty and security.

    • Millions of illegal aliens entered the United States under President Biden’s watch, including human smugglers, gang members, criminals, and terrorists.
    • Some state and local officials are choosing to violate, obstruct, and defy the enforcement of Federal immigration laws, a lawless insurrection against the Federal Government’s constitutional authority to protect the territorial sovereignty of the United States and conduct a unified national policy on immigration.
      • The sanctuary state of Massachusetts released several illegal aliens accused of raping kids back into the community while refusing to hold them for ICE.
      • Jose Ibarra was arrested and released twice before going on to murder Laken Riley.
      • The sanctuary city of Philadelphia ignored an ICE detainer and released a previously deported illegal alien from Honduras, who then went on to rape a child.
    • Beyond creating enormous national security risks, these efforts often violate federal criminal laws, including those prohibiting obstruction of justice, harboring or hiring illegal aliens, conspiring against the United States, and impeding federal law enforcement.

    SECURING OUR HOMELAND: President Trump is following through on his promise to rid the United States of sanctuary cities.

    • President Trump: “No more Sanctuary Cities! They protect the Criminals, not the Victims. They are disgracing our Country, and are being mocked all over the World. Working on papers to withhold all Federal Funding for any City or State that allows these Death Traps to exist!!!”

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Heinrich, Luján Introduce Legislation to Build More Homes for New Mexicans, Reduce Homelessness

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-New Mexico)

    WASHINGTON — U.S. Senators Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) and Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) introduced the Housing for All Act, legislation to address the housing shortage and homelessness crises in New Mexico. If passed, the bill will invest in proven solutions to address housing shortages and provide a historic level of federal funding for programs to bolster innovative, locally developed solutions to increase the housing stock in the state and help New Mexicans experiencing homelessness.

    As the Trump Administration undermines and defunds critical housing services across the country — including illegal staff cuts at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and potential closures of nearly two-thirds of HUD field offices nationwide — investments to boost the affordable housing stock and reduce homelessness are essential.

    “Housing costs in New Mexico and across the country are out of control. The solution is simple: we need to build and renovate more homes. And we need to provide our community leaders with the financial support necessary to carry out this important work,” said Heinrich. “While Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s “DOGE” boys gut housing services that help New Mexicans keep a roof over their head, I’m focused on boosting essential programs that increase the housing stock, lower costs, and help hardworking families get ahead.”

    “In New Mexico and across the country, far too many Americans lack access to affordable housing options and are experiencing homelessness,” said Luján. “As housing programs and services face ongoing attacks and funding cuts, the need to expand affordable housing options has never been greater. That’s why I’m proud to introduce this legislation to address housing shortages and help end homelessness in New Mexico.”

    Across New Mexico, there is a shortage of rental homes affordable and available to households whose incomes are at or below the poverty line or 30% of their area median income. And, according to a January 2024 survey conducted by the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness, 4,649 people experienced homelessness in New Mexico on a night in January. Furthermore, half of New Mexico’s lower-income renters spend more than 30% of their income on housing costs, including utilities.

    Heinrich and Luján’s Housing for All Act takes an all-hands-on-deck approach to combat these crises, including historic investments from the federal government in housing solutions.

    Addressing the Affordable Housing Shortage

    The Housing for All Act addresses the affordable housing shortage by investing in federal housing programs, including:

    • The National Housing Trust Fund
      • This program increases and preserves the supply of affordable housing.
    • The HOME Investment Partnerships Program
      • The HOME program provides grants to state and local governments to build affordable housing for low-income households.
    • The Section 202 Supportive Housing for the Elderly Program
      • The Section 202 program helps expand the supply of affordable housing by supporting nonprofit entities that build housing for low-income seniors.
    • The Section 811 Supportive Housing for People with Disabilities Program
      • The Section 811 program helps build and subsidize rental housing with supportive services for low-income adults with disabilities.

    Addressing the Homelessness Crisis

    The Housing for All Act addresses the homelessness crisis by investing in:

    • Housing Choice Vouchers
      • These vouchers help low-income families, elderly persons, veterans and disabled individuals afford housing in the private market.
    • Project-Based Rental Assistance
      • This type of rental assistance allows tenants to live in an affordable unit and pay rent based upon their income.
    • The Emergency Solutions Grant Program
      • This program connects families and individuals to rapid re-housing assistance, emergency shelter, and homelessness prevention.
    • Continuum of Care Program
      • This program provides funding for efforts to end homelessness and promotes access to programs that can help homeless individuals and families.

    Supporting Innovative and Locally Developed Approaches

    The Housing for All Act supports innovative and locally developed approaches by investing in:

    • Hotel and motel conversions to permanent supportive housing with supportive services.
    • The Eviction Protection Grant Program to support experienced legal service providers in providing legal assistance to low-income tenants at risk of or subject to eviction.
    • Mobile crisis intervention teams to help those with medical or psychological needs get the care that they need.
    • Programs that offer a safe place to park overnight and facilitate access to rehousing and essential services.
    • Library programs that support people experiencing homelessness.
    • Inclusive transit-oriented housing development.
    • Improved coordination of culturally competent, trauma-informed behavioral health and homelessness services.

    A one-page summary of the bill is here.

    A section-by-section summary of the bill is here.

    The text of the bill is here.

    For a list of Heinrich’s actions to lower housing costs and tackle the housing shortage in New Mexico, click here.

    For a list of Luján’s actions to lower housing costs and tackle the housing shortage in New Mexico, click here.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Durbin Reflects On The Life And Legacy Of The Late Pope Francis

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Illinois Dick Durbin
    April 28, 2025
    Durbin: In a world of hate and fear, the Pope’s message of peace and understanding is needed now more than ever
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) today delivered a speech on the Senate floor commemorating and honoring the late Pope Francis. This weekend, Durbin attended the late Pope’s funeral in the Vatican along with U.S. Senators Susan Collins (R-ME), Ed Markey (D-MA), Mike Rounds (R-SD), and Eric Schmitt (R-MO).
    “Today I join people across the world and mourn the passing of Pope Francis. He was forgiving, hopeful, and committed to the notion of peace. Francis taught us that there is no one ‘right’ way to be a Catholic. That the Church can shape you, and you can shape the Church. And in the process, he made the Church stronger,” said Durbin.
    During his speech, Durbin also noted he attended the Pope’s Joint Address to Congress in 2015—the first Pope to ever do so. Durbin then praised Pope Francis for using his platform to highlight the plight of immigrants and refugees, to ask compassion for those in the LGBTQ+ community whom the Church has historically shunned, and to advocate for peace in distant wars and to protect our environment.
    “Like myself, Pope Francis was the child of immigrants, and he often reminded us of our responsibility to welcome the stranger. In a recent letter to American Catholic bishops, Pope Francis affirmed our nation’s right to ‘defend itself and keep communities safe.’ But he raised serious concerns about mass deportation, which ‘damages the dignity of many men and women, and of entire families, and places them in a state of particular vulnerability and defenselessness.’ His message is so timely as our government ignores due process and through an ‘administrative error,’ sends individuals to a hell-hole prison in El Salvador and deports a two-year-old to Honduras,” said Durbin.
    Durbin praised Pope Francis for the speech he prepared for Easter Sunday—one day before he passed away. The Pope was so ill that he was unable to deliver the speech himself, so it was read by one of his aides.
    Durbin continued, “It was a speech of peace. It was a speech of hope. It was the speech of a truly good man. In it, he pled, ‘On this day, I would like all of us to hope anew and to revive our trust in others, including those who are different than ourselves, or who come from distant lands, bringing unfamiliar customs, ways of life and ideas.’”
    Durbin concluded by reflecting on the Pope’s funeral—where hundreds of thousands of people gathered in St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican City to mourn the death of Pope Francis.
    “The crowd was overwhelming. Estimated in the hundreds of thousands, they represented every corner of the Earth. Just in our small section was a delegation in business suits from Lesotho in Africa, Buddhists in bright orange robes, members of the Italian Parliament, a turbaned Sikh delegation from India, and our bipartisan House delegation led by Nancy Pelosi and Republican Leader Steve Scalise. Thousands of Catholic clergy on the altar and in the audience wore vestments presenting every shade of scarlet and red. But the vast crowds of mourners and celebrants were simply admirers of Francis who, in his humble way, touched so many lives. At the front of the altar was his simple wooden casket,” Durbin continued.
    “The funeral ceremony was in Latin, the language of the Catholic Church when I was a young altar boy at St. Elizabeth’s Church in East St. Louis, Illinois, in the 1950’s. As I witnessed this solemn mass and read from the text, I could hear in my mind the rusty hinges of an opening door taking me back to the Latin mass and Gregorian chant of my childhood. It is all still there, ‘deo gratias,’” said Durbin.
    “How did this Mass differ from the Funeral of John Paul II decades ago?  I remember the crowds of Polish mourners with their red and white flags for John Paul II,” Durbin continued. “But with Francis, what struck me were the many waves of spontaneous cheering from the vast crowd when reference was made to his simple message for immigrants, peace, understanding. Who can forget his five words: ‘Who am I to judge?’ defined his humility and humanity for so many of us. After the ceremony, I went back to my hotel room and turned on my TV. There was a recurring segment every few minutes. It showed a simple photograph of Francis and the Italian words: ‘Grazie Francesco, il Papa della gente.’ Translated to English: ‘Thank you, Francis. The Pope of the people.’ We must continue to hold fast to the message of Pope Francis to love and respect one another.  In a world of hate and fear, his message of peace and understanding is needed now more than ever,”Durbin concluded.
    Video of Durbin’s remarks on the Senate floor is available here.
    Audio of Durbin’s remarks on the Senate floor is available here.
    Footage of Durbin’s remarks on the Senate floor is available here for TV Stations.
    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Reverend Warnock, Colleagues Demand President Trump Rescind Harmful Claims That He Will Transfer Incarcerated U.S. Citizens to a Foreign Prison

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Reverend Raphael Warnock – Georgia

    Senator Reverend Warnock, Colleagues Demand President Trump Rescind Harmful Claims That He Will Transfer Incarcerated U.S. Citizens to a Foreign Prison

    In the letter, Senator Reverend Warnock calls for the return of a Maryland father wrongfully deported to El Salvador, Kilmar Abrego Garcia

    Washington, D.C. — U.S. Senators Reverend Raphael Warnock (D-GA), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee led 24 of their Democratic colleagues in a letter to President Donald Trump calling for him to immediately rescind the dangerous and offensive claim that he may transfer incarcerated U.S. citizens to El Salvador.

    In the letter, the Senators also urge the President to follow the law and adhere to all applicable court orders and immediately facilitate the return to the United States of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whom his Administration illegally deported to El Salvador in direct contravention of a court order specifically prohibiting such removal. In the letter, the Senators explain how these unprecedented actions threaten the constitutional protections of all Americans and violate the fundamental principles on which this nation was founded. 

    “Our laws also do not allow you to send individuals from U.S. soil to El Salvador without due process. Further, the Executive Branch must comply with longstanding domestic and international law that prohibits the United States from transferring any person from our jurisdiction or effective control to a place where the person would face certain serious human rights violations. Your Administration’s actions in sending individuals to a Salvadoran prison notorious for inhumane conditions underscore the urgency and applicability of these requirements. The bedrock principles of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause protect individuals from being “deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law,’” the Senators continued.

    Even under extraordinary wartime authorities such as the Alien Enemies Act, the Supreme Court of the United States has held that noncitizens should, at a minimum, have an opportunity to prove whether or not the Act should apply to them. The Supreme Court recently ordered the federal government to facilitate the return of Mr. Abrego Garcia and “ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador.”

    Along with Senators Warnock and Durbin, the letter was signed by U.S. Senators Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Chris Coons (D-DE), Alex Padilla (D-CA), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Peter Welch (D-VT), Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), Tim Kaine (D-VA), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Cory Booker (D-NJ), Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE), John Hickenlooper (D-CO), Ron Wyden (D-OR), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Ed Markey (D-MA), Tina Smith (D-MN), Patty Murray (D-WA), and Martin Heinrich (D-NM).

    The letter is endorsed by the following organizations: Center for Victims of Torture, American Immigration Council, Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, FWD.us, People for the American Way, National Immigrant Justice Center, SMART Union, and Human Rights First.

    The full letter is available HERE and below.

    Dear President Trump:

    We call on you to immediately rescind the dangerous and offensive claim that you may transfer incarcerated U.S. citizens to El Salvador. We further urge you to follow the law and adhere to all applicable court orders and immediately facilitate the return to the United States of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whom your Administration illegally deported to El Salvador in direct contravention of a court order specifically prohibiting such removal. Your unprecedented actions threaten the constitutional protections of all Americans and violate the fundamental principles on which this nation was founded. 

    With regard to your shocking assertion about transferring Americans to El Salvador, you cannot deport Americans to a foreign country for any reason. This nation’s founding fathers declared independence based on “repeated injuries and usurpations” by the then-King of Great Britain, including “transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences” and “depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury.” Accordingly, Congress has passed no provision into law that would permit exiling United States citizens to a foreign country for any reason. One conservative legal scholar called your threats to deport U.S. citizens “obviously illegal and unconstitutional.”

    Our laws also do not allow you to send individuals from U.S. soil to El Salvador without due process. Further, the Executive Branch must comply with longstanding domestic and international law that prohibits the United States from transferring any person from our jurisdiction or effective control to a place where the person would face certain serious human rights violations. Your Administration’s actions in sending individuals to a Salvadoran prison notorious for inhumane conditions underscore the urgency and applicability of these requirements. The bedrock principles of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause protect individuals from being “deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” Throughout our nation’s history, the Supreme Court has long read the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of due process to require that the government provide persons with certain procedural due process protections, including notice and an opportunity to be heard before any such deprivation of liberty.

    Even under extraordinary wartime authorities such as the Alien Enemies Act, the Supreme Court of the United States has held that noncitizens should, at a minimum, have an opportunity to prove whether or not the Act should apply to them. In a statement accompanying the Supreme Court’s recent order for the federal government to facilitate the return of Mr. Abrego Garcia and “ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador,” Justice Sotomayor noted that your Administration’s argument suggesting that the government is permitted to leave Mr. Abrego Garcia in the Salvadoran prison after wrongfully sending him there “implies that it could deport and incarcerate any person, including U.S. citizens, without legal consequence, so long as it does so before a court can intervene.” She went on to note that this is a “view [that] refutes itself.”

    You must immediately facilitate the return of Mr. Abrego Garcia, which is unquestionably within your power to do since your Administration is paying the government of El Salvador to detain him. As Judge Harvie Wilkinson, a conservative appointee of President Reagan, wrote in a unanimous Fourth Circuit opinion rejecting your Administration’s efforts to delay taking steps to bring Mr. Abrego Garcia back to the United States:

    The government is asserting a right to stash away residents of this country in foreign prisons without the semblance of due process that is the foundation of our constitutional order. Further, it claims in essence that because it has rid itself of custody that there is nothing that can be done. This should be shocking not only to judges, but to the intuitive sense of liberty that Americans far removed from courthouses still hold dear.

    You must also end your unlawful attempts to deport noncitizens without due process under the Alien Enemies Act, as the Supreme Court ordered this weekend. You have no authority to openly defy court orders requiring you: (1) to return someone who has been  wrongfully deported, or (2) to grant individuals the due process they are owed under our laws.  As Judge Boasberg wrote in his order last week concluding that probable cause exists to find the government in criminal contempt:

    The Constitution does not tolerate willful disobedience of judicial orders—especially by officials of a coordinate branch who have sworn an oath to uphold it. To permit such officials to freely “annul the judgments of the courts of the United States” would not just “destroy the rights acquired under those judgments”; it would make “a solemn mockery” of “the constitution itself.” …“So fatal a result must be deprecated by all.”

    You must immediately facilitate the return to the United States of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, follow all court orders, and withdraw your dangerous and offensive claims that you may transfer U.S. citizens to a foreign prison. The Constitution demands it.

    Sincerely,

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Dan Goldman Hosts Press Conference Announcing Community-Based Gun Violence Intervention Legislation

    Source: US Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10)

    More Than 17,000 Children and Teenagers Shot Each Year, 4,000 Will Die

    Last Week, Trump Admin Canceled Well Over $180 Million in DOJ Violence Prevention and Grants 

    PROSPER Act Provides Resources and Funding to On-Ground Efforts Already Proven Effective  

     

    See Pictures and Video from Press Conference Here 
    Read the Bill Here

    New York, NY– Congressman Dan Goldman (NY10) held a press conference to announce the reintroduction of his bill, the ‘Prioritizing Resources for Outreach, Safety, Violence Prevention, Youth Empowerment and Resilience’ (PROSPER) Act. This legislation invests in community-based organizations that focus on gun violence intervention and prevention. The bill is intended to ensure these organizations have the support and resources they need to curb gun violence in their local communities.

    Last week, the Trump Administration abruptly canceled hundreds of Department of Justice Grants for gun violence prevention, addiction prevention, and victim advocacy across the country. While Trump and the GOP claim crime prevention and public safety are among their chief concerns, they are kneecapping the very organizations responsible for improving both.

    “As gun violence continues to ravage our communities every year, it’s critical we address this epidemic with a comprehensive, multi-faceted approach,” Congressman Dan Goldman said. “This means not only common-sense gun safety legislation but also investing in community-based intervention and prevention programs that tackle the demand for guns. We have proof of what works, and it’s imperative that we continue to support and strengthen these effective programs. While Trump undermines our public safety by slashing grants for DOJ violence prevention initiatives, legislation like the PROSPER Act is essential to equip local organizations with the resources they need to combat cyclical violence and make our communities safer.”

    The Congressman was joined by representatives from gun violence prevention organizations, as well as New Yorkers who have been personally impacted by gun violence. 

    Rebecca Fischer, Executive Director of New Yorkers Against Gun Violence, said, “While Trump is defunding gun violence prevention initiatives and rolling back public-safety efforts, Congressman Goldman is fighting every day for New Yorkers and leading to save lives. NYAGV knows first-hand how critical community violence intervention programs are for Americans most impacted by gun violence, especially our youth. Gun violence is the leading cause of death for youth nationally and in NYS, and the PROSPER Act is fresh air for all of us who are committed to creating safer environments for our children – in our schools and in our streets. The legislation will authorize substantial funding for the Youth Gun Violence Prevention Grant Program, ensuring a dedicated and consistent source of support for initiatives specifically targeting youth gun violence. This bill ensures that those who are on the ground and understand their communities best will have the necessary resources to implement effective prevention strategies. Thank you Congressman Dan Goldman for your outstanding leadership and for championing this life-saving funding bill.”

    Mark Collins, Director of Federal Policy for Brady: United Against Gun Violence, said, “As gun violence continues to threaten the lives of American youth, it is imperative that we as a nation invest in our children and their future. The Youth Gun Violence Prevention Grant Program under the Department of Justice’s Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention will do just that, providing necessary support to community-oriented violence prevention initiatives and programs aimed at juvenile justice. This investment will strengthen communities across the country and allow our nation’s children to grow into healthy, prosperous members of society. Brady thanks Congressman Goldman for reintroducing the PROSPER Act and for his continued dedication to building up the next generation of Americans.”

    Emma Brown, Executive Director at GIFFORDS, said, “Guns are the leading cause of death for American children, an unacceptable fact. Many young people in this country are continually exposed to community violence. Rep. Goldman’s bill would open an alternate path by funding youth violence prevention programs in communities nationwide, protecting at-risk children and helping to interrupt cycles of violence. We thank Representative Goldman for introducing this crucial legislation, and urge Congress to pass it swiftly.” 

    Dr. Gisele Castro, Chief Executive Officer of exalt, said, “To solve complex problems, we must work with those most proximate to them. This legislation proposes to do exactly that by bringing much needed resources to leaders who are deploying real solutions to youth violence. Our model at exalt provides youth with support through educational progress and pathways to fulfilling careers that enable them to earn a living wage. In this way, exalt empowers justice-involved youth to achieve both academic success and social and economic mobility.  I applaud Congressman Goldman for his thoughtful approach and for introducing this legislation. Together, with the right investments, we can create more resilient, safe, and prosperous communities.” 

    Daniela Gilbert, Director of Redefining Public Safety at the Vera Institute of Justice, said, “Far too many young people—especially Black youth and other young people of color—are growing up in communities where gun violence is a daily threat and opportunity is out of reach. The PROSPER Act is a critical step toward breaking that cycle by investing in what works: community-centered and evidence-based solutions that prevent violence. This bill brings us closer to a future where every young person has the support they need to thrive—not just survive.”

    David Garza, President & CEO of Henry Street Settlement, said, “We are grateful to Representative Dan Goldman for his leadership in providing crucial resources to prevent gun violence among New York City youth. With a 132-year history on the Lower East Side, Henry Street understands that the way to make neighborhoods safe is by ensuring that youth are connected to their communities, and one key way to ensure that is by providing meaningful and responsive human services, including a high-quality, versatile educational, employment, athletics and enrichment, and mental health programming. There is no single answer to violence prevention, but with hope in one hand, opportunity in the other, and someone behind you that believes in you, young people not only can stay safe but can be part of the solution toward moving communities to safety.

    Gun violence is the leading cause of death for American youth. More than 17,000 children are shot each year, resulting in over 4,000 tragic and preventable deaths. Gun violence also has a disproportionate impact on communities of color, with Black children and teens being 20 times more likely to die in a gun-related homicide than their White peers. 

    Young people exposed to gun violence often suffer long-lasting physical, psychological, and emotional trauma. These experiences increase the risk of substance abuse, mental health disorders, and even the perpetuation of violent behavior—creating a tragic cycle of violence that affects future generations. The economic toll of these cycles is staggering, with youth violence costing an estimated $122 billion each year in medical expenses, lost employment opportunities, and diminished quality of life due to injury.

    Evidence-based, community-driven programs have had great success in curbing violence at the local level. For example, Chicago’s Youth Violence Prevention Center reduced local homicides by 17% in one year, even as the city’s overall homicide rate increased. The PROSPER Act will address the demand for guns by reducing the conditions that lead young people into cycles of violence in the first place. This legislation is intended to empower young people, not punish them.

    To address the gun violence epidemic, the  PROSPER Act:

    • Authorizes a new Youth Gun Violence Prevention Program under the Department of Justice’s (DOJ’s) Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP). 

    • This dedicated program would invest in locally tailored and evidence-based violence prevention initiatives by awarding grants to community-based organizations, local, state, and tribal governments.    

    • Provides $100 million in funding for each of the following five fiscal years for Title V Incentive Grants for Local Delinquency Prevention. 

    • This includes $25 million in funding per year for the new Youth Gun Violence Prevention Program. The remaining funding would be allocated for other juvenile justice programs carried out by the DOJ such as gang prevention, opioid affected youth, children exposed to violence, trafficking prevention, etc. 

    Congressman Goldman has made gun violence prevention a centerpiece of his time in office. 

    In March, the Congressman joined colleagues in sending a letter to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg highlighting Meta’s failure to adequately regulate advertisements for gun silencers on its platform and requesting clarification around the platform’s ad moderation process.  
    In February, the Congressman joined Rep. DeLauro in introducing ‘Ethan’s Law’, which would set federal standards for safe gun storage and establish incentives for states to create and implement safe gun storage laws. 
    In January, the Congressman joined Reps. Blumenthal, Dean, Raskin, Thompson, and Johnson in leading 43 of his colleagues in an amicus brief to the Supreme Court in Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc. et al., v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos, to hold American gun manufacturers responsible for aiding and abetting illegal arms trafficking to Mexican drug cartels and fueling gun violence across Mexico. 

    Congressman Goldman is the Chair of the Gun Violence Prevention Working Group on Dads Caucus.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: ICE arrests illegal alien convicted of murder in New York

    Source: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

    BUFFALO, N.Y. – U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Noel Hernandez Leon, a 50-year-old illegal alien from Mexico, upon his release from the New York Department of Corrections and Community Supervision at Fishkill Correctional Facility in Beacon, New York, April 17.

    Hernandez illegally entered the United States on an unknown date and location without admission or parole by an immigration official. The Kings County Supreme Court in Brooklyn convicted Hernandez of first and second-degree murder and first-degree robbery Dec. 11, 1996, and sentenced him to 20 years to life imprisonment. An immigration judge ordered Hernandez removed from the United States May 26, 1999.

    Hernandez is currently detained at Buffalo Federal Detention Facility in Batavia, New York, awaiting removal to Mexico.

    Members of the public can report crimes and suspicious activity by dialing 866-347-2423 or completing ICE’s online tip form.

    Learn more about Enforcement and Removal Operations Buffalo’s mission to preserve public safety on X, @EROBuffalo.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: 2 felons sentenced for illegal reentry into the country

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    McALLEN, Texas – Two foreign nationals have been ordered to federal prison for returning to the United States without authorization, announced U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Ganjei.

    Porfirio Martinez-Santos, 55, Mexico, pleaded guilty Dec. 17, 2024, while Juan Esteban Zelaya-Hernandez, 42, Honduras, admitted his guilt Jan. 31.

    Chief U.S. District Judge Randy Crane has now ordered Martinez-Santos and Zelaya-Hernandez to serve 42 and 21 months in federal prison, respectively. At their hearings, the court heard additional evidence regarding both men’s criminal histories. Zelaya-Hernandez has two convictions from 2023 for possession of a firearm by a felon and illegal reentry. In handing down the sentences, Judge Crane noted Martinez-Santos had previously served a 37-month sentence for illegal reentry.

    Both are again expected to face removal proceedings following their prison terms.

    Law enforcement found Martinez-Santos near Cuevitas Oct. 4, 2024, while they discovered Zelaya-Hernandez near La Homa the following month. Both had claimed they had illegally entered the United States on the same day of their respective discoveries near Hidalgo.

    The investigation revealed Zelaya-Hernandez had been ordered removed in August 2024 after serving a federal prison sentence for two felonies. Martinez-Santos was removed in 2023.

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

    Border Patrol conducted the investigations. Assistant U.S. Attorney Avery Benitez prosecuted the cases.

    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 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 and Project Safe Neighborhood.

    MIL Security OSI –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Prior felon arrested for illegal re-entry

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    BUFFALO, N.Y. – U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that Jhonser Rafael Coste-Morales, 38, a citizen of the Dominican Republic, was arrested and charged by criminal complaint with illegal re-entry of a removed alien, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicholas M. Testani, who is handling the case, stated that according to the complaint, on May 26, 2024, a New York State Trooper in Painted Post, NY, arrested two individuals for possession of fentanyl. U.S. Border Patrol was contacted to assist in verifying foreign documents provided by the two individuals. Record checks determined that one of the individuals, Coste-Morales, was a citizen and national of the Dominican Republic and had been previously deported from the United States following an aggravated felony conviction. On April 14, 2025, Border Patrol agents received a call that Coste-Morales was going to be released from custody. Coste-Morales was subsequently arrested again and taken into custody.

    Coste-Morales legally entered the United States in April 2013 and became a Lawfully Admitted Permanent Resident in August 2017. In April 2022, he was convicted of a felony drug charge in Montour County, Pennsylvania, and in October 2023, he was deported back to the Dominican Republic.

    Coste-Morales made an initial appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Colleen D. Holland and was detained.

    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.

    The complaint is a result of an investigation by U.S. Border Patrol, under the direction of Patrol Agent in Charge Juan Ramirez and the New York State Police, under the direction of Major Kevin Sucher.

    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.     

    # # # #

    MIL Security OSI –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Alleged Purse Thief Charged with Robbery, Aggravated Identity Theft, and Wire Fraud

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    WASHINGTON – Mario Bustamante Leiva, 49, a Chilean National who is in the U.S. illegally, was arrested on April 26, 2025, on a criminal complaint charging wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and robbery in connection with three purse snatchings in the District and the unauthorized use of victim credit cards.

    The charges were announced by U.S. Attorney Edward R. Martin Jr., U.S. Secret Service Special Agent in Charge Matt McCool, and Chief Pamela Smith of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD).

    An initial appearance in U.S. District Court is pending. Bustamante Leiva appeared in Superior Court today on an unrelated fugitive warrant. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has lodged an immigration detainer against him.

    According to court documents, on April 12, 2025, a victim reported to MPD that her purse was stolen from the back of her chair while she was dining at Nando’s restaurant, in the 800 block of F Street, NW. Law enforcement recovered video surveillance of the suspect who appeared to be acting in concert with a second individual (Suspect 2). An unauthorized transaction totaling more than $500 was made using the victim’s credit card.

    On April 17, 2025, a victim at the Westin Hotel, in the 900 block of 9th Street, NW, reported her purse had been stolen while it was hanging on the back of her chair, while she was having dinner. Two unauthorized transactions for more than $400 were made using the victim’s credit card.

    On April 20, 2025, a third victim, who was dining at the Capital Burger restaurant in the 1000 block of 7th Street, NW, reported that her purse, which she had placed at her feet while dining, had gone missing. Law enforcement recovered video surveillance of the suspect, who made unauthorized transactions, totaling more than $200, using the victim’s credit card. The victim also lost cash and personal documents.

    “Thanks to the efforts of the Secret Service working in concert with the Metropolitan Police Department, this alleged thief was quickly identified, arrested, and, with the deft management of the Assistant US Attorney, charged,” said U.S. Attorney Martin.  “He will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

    “We began this investigation with only a grainy security video of a masked offender,” said U.S. Secret Service Washington Field Office Special Agent in Charge, Matt McCool. “The subsequent arrests in this case are a testament to the extraordinary investigative work by the analysts and special agents of the Washington Field Office, the USSS Uniformed Division, and the Metropolitan Police Department.   We also received valuable assistance from our partners at the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”

    During the course of the investigation, law enforcement learned that on April 19, 2025, Bustamante Leiva had reported a robbery to Montgomery County (MD) Police, claiming a bag containing his belongings were stolen from him while he was asleep on a bench.

    On April 26, 2025, law enforcement from the U.S. Secret Service and MPD went to a location where Bustamante Leiva was staying, located him, and placed him under arrest. Following his arrest, law enforcement interviewed Bustamante Leiva in connection with the purse thefts.

    This case is being investigated by the U.S. Secret Service and MPD. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Benjamin Helfand.

    MIL Security OSI –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Connecticut Man Who Committed Narcotics Offense While on Federal Supervised Release Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    BOSTON – A Connecticut man was sentenced today in federal court in Worcester for his role in a fentanyl trafficking conspiracy.

    Hector Soto Gonzalez, 44, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Margaret R. Guzman to 10 years in prison, to be followed by five years of supervised release. In January 2024, Mercado Aponte was charged with one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute four hundred grams or more of fentanyl and one count of distribution of and possession with intent to distribute fentanyl.

    Beginning at least as early as June 2023, while Soto Gonzalez was on federal supervised release after serving a 10-year sentence for a narcotics conviction in the District of Puerto Rico, Soto Gonzalez became a source of supply for fentanyl for co-defendant Jose Mercado Aponte. Mercado Aponte travelled from Massachusetts to the area of Soto Gonzalez’s residence in Hartford, Conn., on multiple occasions to pick up drugs that Mercado Aponte then provided to a cooperating witness (CW).  
        
    On Nov. 13, 2023, Mercado Aponte arranged to sell a kilogram of fentanyl to the CW. On that date, Mercado Aponte communicated with the CW to coordinate the deal and then made three calls to Soto Gonzalez. Later that afternoon, law enforcement conducting surveillance of the residence observed Soto Gonzalez leave his residence and put something in his trunk. Soto Gonzalez subsequently departed his residence in his truck and travelled from Connecticut to Massachusetts where a traffic stop was conducted and approximately one kilogram of fentanyl was located inside the vehicle. Soto Gonzalez was released from federal custody in May 2022 after being sentenced and serving 70 months in prison.
        
    United States Attorney Leah B. Foley; James Crowley, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Boston Division; Colonel Geoffrey Noble of the Massachusetts State Police; and Commissioner Shawn Jenkins of the Massachusetts Department of Correction made the announcement today. The Federal Bureau of Investigation New Haven Division, Norfolk County Sheriff’s Office and the Watertown, Reading, Peabody, Hudson, Concord, Waltham, Fitchburg, Leominster and Hartford, Conn. Police Departments provided valuable assistance. Assistant U.S. Attorney J. Mackenzie Duane of the Narcotics & Money Laundering Unit is prosecuting the case.

    MIL Security OSI –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Ecuadoran National Charged with Illegally Reentering U.S.

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Marc H. Silverman, Acting United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, today announced that STANLIN DANIEL VASQUEZ-SALINAS, also known as “Stalin Vasquez-Salinas” and “Stalin Vasquez,” 25, a citizen of Ecuador recently residing in Danbury, has been charged by federal criminal complaint with unlawful reentry of a removed alien.

    As alleged in court documents and statements made in court, on March 11, 2025, Danbury Police arrested Vasquez-Salinas and charged him with conspiracy to commit commercial sexual abuse of a minor between the ages of 15 and 17 years old.  Vasquez-Salinas identified himself as “Stalin D. Vasquez” at the time of his arrest.  Analysis of Vasquez-Salinas’ fingerprints confirmed his true identity, and the investigation revealed that Vasquez-Salinas had illegally entered the U.S. in December 2019 and was arrested by the U.S. Border Patrol in Texas.  He was removed to Ecuador in May 2020.

    It is further alleged that, on March 14, 2025, Vasquez-Salinas was released from state custody on bond.  That same day, after a brief vehicle chase and subsequent foot pursuit, he was taken into ICE custody.

    Vasquez-Salinas has been detained since March 14, 2025.  He appeared today in Hartford federal court.  The charge of unlawful reentry of a removed alien carries a maximum term of imprisonment of two years.

    Acting U.S. Attorney Silverman stressed that a complaint is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt.  Charges are only allegations and each defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

    This matter is being investigated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Enforcement and Removal Operations, with the assistance of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.  The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Neeraj. N. Patel.

    Acting U.S. Attorney Silverman thanked the State’s Attorney’s Office for the Judicial District of Danbury for its close cooperation in investigating and prosecuting this matter.

    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 (OCDETF) and Project Safe Neighborhood (PSN).

    MIL Security OSI –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Youth Mobility Scheme for Uruguayan and British citizens: 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    Youth Mobility Scheme for Uruguayan and British citizens: 2025

    • English
    • Español de América Latina

    The Youth Mobility Scheme allows 500 visas, both for Uruguayan and British nationals, to live, study, work and travel in the UK and Uruguay respectively.

    In 2025, 500 British and 500 Uruguayan nationals aged 18 to 30 years old will be able to experience life and culture in each other’s country for up to 2 years, as established in the agreement that came into effect in both countries on 31 January 2024.

    Uruguayan citizens who would like to travel to the UK under this scheme need to apply for a Youth Mobility Scheme (YMS) visa. British citizens who would like to travel to Uruguay should apply for a Working Holiday temporary residency.

    The scheme desires to foster close relations between British and Uruguayan nationals, intending to promote and facilitate access to opportunities that enable youth to gain a better understanding of the other participant’s culture, society, and languages through travel, work, and life experience abroad.

    This is the first YMS between the UK and a South American Country. The agreement was signed in August 2023 at the Uruguayan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, during the visit of FCDO Minister for the Americas and Caribbean David Rutley MP to Uruguay.

    UK has YMS agreements in place with Andorra, Australia, Canada, Republic of Korea, Hong Kong, Iceland, Japan, Monaco, New Zealand, San Marino, Taiwan and Uruguay.

    Uruguay has Working Holiday programmes with Australia, France, Germany, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, and United Kingdom.

    Find below information about the scheme and how to apply, for British and Uruguayan nationals.

    Information for British nationals

    British citizens interested in applying for a Working Holiday temporary residency must attend the Uruguayan Consulate in London and submit the following documents:

    • valid passport in good condition, with an expiry date at least one year in the future
    • a medical certificate from the country of residence where it states that you do not have medical conditions that would make it impossible for you to reside in Uruguay
    • evidence of a Police Certificate from the country of origin and from any country that you have lived in for the past 5 years. This should be apostilled or legalised, whichever is appropriate. In the UK you can apply for this at: http://www.gov.uk/copy-of-police-records. The six must have been issued within the 6 months prior to the filing of the application
    • documents that demonstrate that they have sufficient financial resources to meet their needs (such as salary payslips, bank statements, pensions, etc.) issued within 30 days of the application date
    • declaration of the intended time they will remain in Uruguay, which will be up to 2 years
    • apostille or legalised birth certificate (whichever is the case, if the person was born outside the UK) and translated (by a certified Uruguayan translator, by Consul or by consular intervention, depending on the case) will be required in Uruguay in order to obtain the Uruguayan National Identity card

    Once the documentation is submitted, the Consulate will inform the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ International Migration Direction, which will notify the National Migration Office. A decision will be made within a maximum of 15 working days.

    If the application is successful, the Consulate will let you will know. You will then need to enter Uruguay within 180 days from the notification day. If you need a visa, the Consulate will issue a tourist visa without consulting with the National Migration Office, referring to the temporary residency granted.

    Once you are in Uruguay, you will need to go in person to the National Migration Office and the National Civil Identification Office to apply for the National Identity card and pay the required fees. If youneed more information, please contact the Uruguayan Consulate or Uruguayan Embassy: cdlondres@mrree.gub.uy or urureinounido@mree.gub.uy, or call: +44 (0)207 584 4200

    Information for Uruguayan nationals:

    • applications to the Youth Mobility Scheme are online. You can apply from any country in the world, except from the UK
    • you can apply if you are a Uruguayan National aged 18-30 years old and hold a Uruguayan passport
    • you can spend up to 2 years in the UK, with multiple entries
    • you can work but it is not compulsory. You can travel, study short courses or volunteer
    • you do not need any language, job or skill requirements
    • you must apply for a visa and pay the Immigration Health Surcharge
    • you need to demonstrate you have the equivalent to £2,530 in a bank account for at least the past 28 days before applying
    • you need to get a Criminal Record Certificate. Please request it for Consulate- Ministry of Foreign Affairs, not the British Embassy
    • you cannot apply if you have any dependants living with you or who are financially dependent on you at the time of application
    • you must not have not previously taken part in the scheme

    Applicants will usually get a decision on their visa within 3 weeks.

    For more information, please go to Youth Mobility Scheme visa: Overview – GOV.UK or contact: public.enquiries@homeoffice.gov.uk.

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    Updates to this page

    Published 28 April 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: How ICE is becoming a secret police force under the Trump administration

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lee Morgenbesser, Associate Professor, School of Government and International Relations, Griffith University

    Secret police are a quintessential feature of authoritarian regimes. From Azerbaijan’s State Security Service to Zimbabwe’s Central Intelligence Organisation, these agencies typically target political opponents and dissidents through covert surveillance, imprisonment and physical violence.

    In contrast to the regular police and armed forces, secret police primarily use preemptive repression to thwart threats to the government.

    In Nazi Germany, for example, Gestapo informants penetrated all levels of society, producing an atmosphere of distrust among those against Adolf Hitler. In Uganda, Idi Amin’s State Research Bureau employed sophisticated spying equipment and intercepted mail at the post office to root out supposed saboteurs.

    In Syria, Bashar al-Assad relied on the General Intelligence Directorate to oversee a network of torture centres. And in Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro has used the Bolivarian National Intelligence Service (Sebin) to spy on opponents overseas, often running operations out of diplomatic missions.

    Since US President Donald Trump took power in January, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has become a far more visible and fearsome force on American streets.

    Though ICE is ostensibly still bound by constitutional limits, the way it has been operating bears the hallmarks of a secret police force in the making.

    As an expert on authoritarian regimes, I’ve studied historical and contemporary secret police forces extensively across Africa, Asia and Europe. They typically meet five criteria:

    • they’re a police force targeting political opponents and dissidents

    • they’re not controlled by other security agencies and answer directly to the dictator

    • the identity of their members and their operations are secret

    • they specialise in political intelligence and surveillance operations

    • they carry out arbitrary searches, arrests, interrogations, indefinite detentions, disappearances and torture.

    How close is ICE to becoming a secret police force? Let’s consider each of these criteria.

    Targeting dissidents

    ICE has used the pretext of combating antisemitism to target dissidents. A branch of the agency previously used to target drug smugglers and human traffickers has reportedly been directed to scan social media for posts sympathetic to Hamas.

    On March 8, ICE arrested the prominent pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil, a legal resident. It was a similar story for Rumeysa Ozturk, a university student grabbed off the street on March 25 by ICE agents.

    Trump has cited the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 as the legal pretext for ICE’s actions in these cases and others. The law allows the US government to deport anyone whose presence has “adverse foreign policy consequences” for the country.

    Because Khalil and others are being targeted for their activism, legal scholars say the government appears to be “retaliating” against constitutionally protected free speech it disagrees with.

    Directly controlled by a dictator

    While ICE does not report directly to Trump, the agency is controlled by people who have shown intense loyalty to him.

    ICE is part of the Department of Homeland Security, which is overseen by stalwart Trump ally Kristi Noem. She is supported by Tom Homan, a former ICE director who Trump appointed as his “border czar” in November 2024.

    Despite a court order barring the deportations of alleged Venezuelan gang members to a prison in El Salvador, Homan has remained defiant:

    We are not stopping. I don’t care what the judges think.

    The pertinent question now is whether Noem or Homan would refuse to follow a dictate from Trump in the face of a direct court order.

    Opaque operations

    ICE agents are increasingly operating in secret. The individuals who took Ozturk off the street in a widely shared video claimed to be police officers, even though they were in plain clothes and face marks.

    Similarly, ICE agents in plain clothes detained two men during a raid on a courthouse in Charlottesville, Virginia, on April 22. When two bystanders asked to see a warrant, they were ordered not to “impede” the agents’ lawful duties. ICE later said the two women would be prosecuted.

    Also last week, ICE agents attempted to arrest a man at a Wisconsin courthouse without a warrant. After a judge intervened, she was arrested herself by the FBI and charged with two felonies.

    This shroud of opacity has been accompanied by an end to local agency liaison meetings aimed at helping people seek answers to ICE’s actions.

    Surveillance capabilities

    ICE is organised into two distinct law enforcement components, giving it both political intelligence gathering and surveillance capabilities.

    Its Homeland Security Investigations arm includes an intelligence division, while its Enforcement and Removal Operations arm uses third-party companies such as Geo Group, Giant Oak, and Palantir to conduct mass surveillance.

    Most worryingly, ICE is trying to procure greater intelligence and surveillance capabilities by soliciting pitches from private companies to monitor threats across the internet.

    According to a procurement document, contractors would be directed to focus on the backgrounds of social media users and use facial recognition capabilities to gather information on people. Criticisms of ICE itself would be monitored, too.

    Unlawful policing

    There has been a stream of reports exposing how ICE is conducting arbitrary searches, arrests, interrogations, and indefinite detentions.

    Some of the most egregious reported examples include:

    • entering primary schools under false pretences in search of undocumented students

    • carrying out “collateral arrests”, that is detaining people not previously identified as targets during operations

    • detaining tourists and visa holders for weeks for unknown reasons

    • and disappearing US citizens without any meaningful process.

    Since Trump’s inauguration, at least three people have died in ICE detention facilities, the latest in a string of fatalities in recent years.

    Prolonged solitary confinement is reportedly widespread. UN experts say this can amount to torture.

    Potentially expanded scope

    Overall, the evidence shows ICE meets most of the criteria for being a secret police force. It has yet to target political opponents, which I define narrowly as members of the Democratic Party. And it is not directly controlled by Trump, although the current structure provides him with plausible deniability.

    While the agency is far from resembling history’s most feared secret police forces, there have so far been few constraints on how it operates.

    The worst may be yet to come. A budget bill making its way through Congress would provide ICE with up to US$175 billion (A$274 billion) in funding over the next decade. (Its current annual budget is US$9 billion, or A$14 billion.) This would supercharge its use of surveillance, imprisonment and physical violence.

    When combined with a potential shift towards targeting US citizens for dissent and disobedience, ICE is fast becoming a key piece in the repressive apparatus of American authoritarianism.

    Lee Morgenbesser 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. How ICE is becoming a secret police force under the Trump administration – https://theconversation.com/how-ice-is-becoming-a-secret-police-force-under-the-trump-administration-255019

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: EZCORP Reports Second Quarter Fiscal 2025 Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    AUSTIN, Texas, April 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — EZCORP, Inc. (NASDAQ: EZPW), a leading provider of pawn transactions in the United States and Latin America, today announced results for its second quarter ended March 31, 2025.

    Unless otherwise noted, all amounts in this release are in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) and comparisons shown are to the same period in the prior year.

    SECOND QUARTER HIGHLIGHTS

    • Pawn loans outstanding (PLO) up 11% to $261.8 million.
    • Net income increased 18% to $25.4 million. On an adjusted basis1, net income increased 25% to $26.1 million.
    • Diluted earnings per share increased 14% to $0.33. On an adjusted basis, diluted earnings per share increased 21% to $0.34.
    • Adjusted EBITDA increased 23% to $45.1 million.
    • Total revenues increased 7% to $306.3 million, while gross profit increased 6% to $178.5 million.
    • Completed a $300.0 million private offering of senior notes due 2032.

    CEO COMMENTARY AND OUTLOOK
    Lachie Given, Chief Executive Officer, stated, “Our team delivered another impressive quarter of operational and financial performance, highlighted by record Q2 PLO, which drove strong growth in revenue and pawn service charges. Persistent inflation and economic pressure continue to impact value-conscious consumers who are increasingly turning to us for short-term cash and secondhand goods. Our strengthened operating model and best-in-class customer service also fueled the bottom line, driving a material increase in adjusted EBITDA to $45.1 million, up 23%.

    “Our consistent performance across geographies reflects our company-wide commitment to our core values of People, Pawn and Passion. In the U.S., PLO and adjusted EBITDA increased 15%, reflecting strong loan demand, increased average loan size and disciplined cost management. In Latin America, PLO increased 17% on a constant currency basis, and adjusted EBITDA grew 36%, propelled by robust demand for loans and secondhand goods and our strong operational execution.

    “Our disciplined capital allocation strategy prioritizes substantial liquidity to drive strong organic growth, pursue value-enhancing acquisitions and investments and meet near-term debt maturities. In March, we completed a $300.0 million private offering of senior notes, the Company’s largest financing transaction to date, expanding our financial flexibility for continued growth and meaningfully enhancing our capital structure, as we retire our 2025 convertible notes maturing on May 1.

    “It was another outstanding quarter for EZCORP, and I thank the team for their unwavering commitment to operational excellence as we continue to drive significantly enhanced value for our shareholders.”

    CONSOLIDATED RESULTS

    Three Months Ended March 31 As Reported   Adjusted1
    in millions, except per share amounts 2025
      2024
      2025
      2024
                   
    Total revenues $ 306.3     $ 285.6     $ 318.9     $ 285.6  
    Gross profit $ 178.5     $ 167.6     $ 185.0     $ 167.6  
    Income before tax $ 34.4     $ 28.7     $ 35.4     $ 28.0  
    Net income $ 25.4     $ 21.5     $ 26.1     $ 21.0  
    Diluted earnings per share $ 0.33     $ 0.29     $ 0.34     $ 0.28  
    EBITDA (non-GAAP measure) $ 43.8     $ 37.4     $ 45.1     $ 36.7  
                                   
    • PLO increased 11% to $261.8 million, up $26.1 million. On a same-store2 basis, PLO increased 11% due to increase in average loan size, continued strong pawn demand and improved operational performance.
    • Total revenues increased 7% and gross profit increased 6%, reflecting improved pawn service charge (PSC) revenues due to higher average PLO.
    • PSC increased 8% as a result of higher average PLO.
    • Merchandise sales gross margin at 34%, down from 35%. Aged general merchandise was 2.4% of total general merchandise inventory, up 14 basis points.
    • Net inventory increased 27%, as a result of the increase in PLO and decrease in inventory turnover to 2.5x, from 2.9x.
    • Store expenses increased 2% and were flat on a same-store basis.
    • General and administrative expenses increased 8%, primarily due to labor and a gain on a corporate lease termination in the prior year.
    • Income before taxes was $34.4 million, up 20% from $28.7 million, and adjusted EBITDA increased 23% to $45.1 million.
    • Diluted earnings per share increased 14% to $0.33. On an adjusted basis, diluted earnings per share increased 21% to $0.34.
    • Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the quarter was $505.2 million, up from $170.5 million as of September 30, 2024. The increase was primarily due to $300.0 million (less issuance costs) from the issuance of the Senior Notes due 2032 and cash from operating activities.

    SEGMENT RESULTS
    U.S. Pawn

    • PLO ended the quarter at $199.4 million, up 15% on a total and same-store basis due to increase in average loan size, increased loan demand and improved operational performance.
    • Total revenues increased 7% and gross profit increased 8%, reflecting higher PSC.
    • PSC increased 9% as a result of higher average PLO, partially offset by lower PLO yield.
    • Merchandise sales increased 2%, and gross margin decreased to 36% from 37%. Aged general merchandise decreased by 14 basis points to 2.8%, or $1.3 million of total general merchandise inventory. Excluding our three Max Pawn luxury stores in Las Vegas, aged general merchandise was 1.5%.
    • Net inventory increased 29%, due to increase in PLO, increase in customer layaways and a decrease in inventory turnover to 2.3x, from 2.6x.
    • Store expenses increased 3% (2% on a same-store basis) primarily due to labor, the majority of which was offset by a decrease in expenses related to our loyalty program.
    • Segment contribution increased 16% to $47.1 million.
    • Segment store count remained at 542.

    Latin America Pawn

    • PLO improved to $62.4 million, up 1% (17% on constant currency basis). On a same-store basis, PLO decreased 2% (14% increase on a constant currency basis). The constant currency increase was due to improved operational performance and increased loan demand.
    • Total revenues were up 9% (25% on constant currency basis), and gross profit increased 3% (18% on a constant currency basis), mainly due to increased PSC.
    • PSC increased to $28.3 million, up 4% (19% on a constant currency basis) as a result of higher average PLO.
    • Merchandise sales increased 5% (21% on constant currency basis) and merchandise sales gross margin decreased to 30% from 33%. Aged general merchandise increased to 1.9% from 1.4% of total general merchandise inventory.
    • Net inventory increased 23% (44% on a constant currency basis) due to increase in PLO and decrease in inventory turnover to 3.2x, from 3.6x.
    • Store expenses decreased 2% (13% increase on a constant currency basis) and decreased 4% on a same-store basis (11% increase on a constant currency basis). The constant currency increase was primarily due to increased labor, in line with store activity and minimum wage increases, offset by a decrease in expenses related to our loyalty program.
    • Segment contribution increased 30% to $10.6 million (43% on a constant currency basis). On an adjusted basis, segment contribution was up 42% to $11.6 million.
    • Segment store count increased by one to 742 due to the addition of nine de novo stores, the acquisition of one store, and the consolidation of nine stores.

    FORM 10-Q
    EZCORP’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The report is available in the Investor Relations section of the Company’s website at http://investors.ezcorp.com. EZCORP shareholders may obtain a paper copy of the report, free of charge, by sending a request to the investor relations contact below.

    CONFERENCE CALL
    EZCORP will host a conference call on Tuesday, April 29, 2025, at 8:00 am Central Time to discuss Second Quarter Fiscal 2025 results. Analysts and institutional investors may participate on the conference call by registering online at https://registrations.events/direct/NTM1088399. Once registered you will receive the dial-in details with a unique PIN to join the call. The conference call will be webcast simultaneously to the public through this link: https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/hqptihjy. A replay of the conference call will be available online at http://investors.ezcorp.com shortly after the end of the call. 

    ABOUT EZCORP
    Formed in 1989, EZCORP has grown into a leading provider of pawn transactions in the United States and Latin America. We also sell pre-owned and recycled merchandise, primarily collateral forfeited from pawn lending operations and merchandise purchased from customers. We are dedicated to satisfying the short-term cash needs of consumers who are both cash and credit constrained, focusing on an industry-leading customer experience. EZCORP is traded on NASDAQ under the symbol EZPW and is a member of the S&P 1000 Index and Nasdaq Composite Index. 

    Follow us on social media:
    Facebook EZPAWN Official https://www.facebook.com/EZPAWN/
    EZCORP Instagram Official https://www.instagram.com/ezcorp_official/
    EZPAWN Instagram Official https://www.instagram.com/ezpawnofficial/
    EZCORP LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/ezcorp/

    FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
    This announcement contains certain forward-looking statements regarding the Company’s strategy, initiatives and expected performance. These statements are based on the Company’s current expectations as to the outcome and timing of future events. All statements, other than statements of historical facts, including all statements regarding the Company’s strategy, initiatives and future performance, that address activities or results that the Company plans, expects, believes, projects, estimates or anticipates, will, should or may occur in the future, including future financial or operating results, are forward-looking statements. Actual results for future periods may differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements due to a number of uncertainties and other factors, including operating risks, liquidity risks, legislative or regulatory developments, market factors, current or future litigation and risks associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. For a discussion of these and other factors affecting the Company’s business and prospects, see the Company’s annual, quarterly and other reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements to reflect changed assumptions, the occurrence of unanticipated events or changes to future operating results over time.

    Contact:
    Email: Investor_Relations@ezcorp.com
    Phone: (512) 314-2220

           
    EZCORP, Inc.
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
    (Unaudited)
           
      Three Months Ended
    March 31,
      Six Months Ended
    March 31,
    (in thousands, except per share amounts) 2025   2024   2025   2024
    Revenues:              
    Merchandise sales $ 169,467     $ 164,687     $ 355,810     $ 344,090  
    Jewelry scrapping sales   20,938       13,714       37,670       27,796  
    Pawn service charges   115,871       107,163       232,923       213,612  
    Other revenues   40       75       83       132  
    Total revenues   306,316       285,639       626,486       585,630  
    Merchandise cost of goods sold   111,555       106,259       233,379       221,469  
    Jewelry scrapping cost of goods sold   16,309       11,788       29,251       23,996  
    Gross profit   178,452       167,592       363,856       340,165  
    Operating expenses:              
    Store expenses   116,527       114,582       232,978       225,137  
    General and administrative   19,640       18,266       38,309       34,809  
    Depreciation and amortization   8,020       8,219       16,355       16,784  
    Loss (gain) on sale or disposal of assets and other   17       3       25       (169 )
    Other income   —       (765 )     —       (765 )
    Total operating expenses   144,204       140,305       287,667       275,796  
    Operating income   34,248       27,287       76,189       64,369  
    Interest expense   3,281       3,402       6,428       6,842  
    Interest income   (1,875 )     (2,882 )     (3,968 )     (5,521 )
    Equity in net income of unconsolidated affiliates   (1,505 )     (1,719 )     (2,980 )     (2,872 )
    Other (income) expense   (65 )     (165 )     913       (436 )
    Income before income taxes   34,412       28,651       75,796       66,356  
    Income tax expense   9,022       7,172       19,390       16,407  
    Net income $ 25,390     $ 21,479     $ 56,406     $ 49,949  
                   
    Basic earnings per share $ 0.46     $ 0.39     $ 1.03     $ 0.91  
    Diluted earnings per share $ 0.33     $ 0.29     $ 0.74     $ 0.65  
                   
    Weighted-average basic shares outstanding   54,965       55,093       54,895       55,084  
    Weighted-average diluted shares outstanding   83,140       83,045       83,247       84,948  
                                   
    EZCORP, Inc.
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
    (Unaudited)
               
    (in thousands, except share and per share amounts) March 31,
    2025
      March 31,
    2024
      September 30,
    2024
               
    Assets:          
    Current assets:          
    Cash and cash equivalents $ 505,239     $ 229,111     $ 170,513  
    Restricted cash   9,499       8,581       9,294  
    Pawn loans   261,830       235,773       274,084  
    Pawn service charges receivable, net   42,323       38,268       44,013  
    Inventory, net   207,783       163,429       191,923  
    Prepaid expenses and other current assets   40,283       47,142       39,171  
    Total current assets   1,066,957       722,304       728,998  
    Investments in unconsolidated affiliates   13,967       13,162       13,329  
    Other investments   51,903       51,220       51,900  
    Property and equipment, net   64,150       63,306       65,973  
    Right-of-use assets, net   229,878       243,752       226,602  
    Goodwill   305,239       310,658       306,478  
    Intangible assets, net   57,079       61,714       58,451  
    Deferred tax asset, net   25,090       26,247       25,362  
    Other assets, net   15,365       15,779       16,144  
    Total assets $ 1,829,628     $ 1,508,142     $ 1,493,237  
               
    Liabilities and equity:          
    Current liabilities:          
    Current maturities of long-term debt, net $ 103,325     $ 34,347     $ 103,072  
    Accounts payable, accrued expenses and other current liabilities   70,843       62,838       85,737  
    Customer layaway deposits   31,016       20,352       21,570  
    Operating lease liabilities, current   58,855       55,658       58,998  
    Total current liabilities   264,039       173,195       269,377  
    Long-term debt, net   517,188       326,573       224,256  
    Deferred tax liability, net   1,818       465       2,080  
    Operating lease liabilities   182,873       197,285       180,616  
    Other long-term liabilities   12,135       10,228       12,337  
    Total liabilities   978,053       707,746       688,666  
    Commitments and contingencies          
    Stockholders’ equity:          
    Class A Non-voting Common Stock, par value $0.01 per share; shares authorized: 100 million; issued and outstanding: 52,043,599 as of March 31, 2025; 52,057,309 as of March 31, 2024; and 51,582,698 as of September 30, 2024   520       521       516  
    Class B Voting Common Stock, convertible, par value $0.01 per share; shares authorized: 3 million; issued and outstanding: 2,970,171   30       30       30  
    Additional paid-in capital   347,796       345,174       348,366  
    Retained earnings   561,211       477,683       507,206  
    Accumulated other comprehensive loss   (57,982 )     (23,012 )     (51,547 )
    Total equity   851,575       800,396       804,571  
    Total liabilities and equity $ 1,829,628     $ 1,508,142     $ 1,493,237  
                           
    EZCORP, Inc.
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
    (Unaudited)
       
      Six Months Ended
    March 31,
    (in thousands) 2025   2024
       
    Operating activities:      
    Net income $ 56,406     $ 49,949  
    Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:      
    Depreciation and amortization   16,355       16,784  
    Amortization of deferred financing costs   725       807  
    Non-cash lease expense   28,943       29,514  
    Deferred income taxes   10       515  
    Other adjustments   (1,241 )     (1,429 )
    Provision for inventory reserve   39       183  
    Stock compensation expense   5,001       4,844  
    Equity in net income from investment in unconsolidated affiliates   (2,980 )     (2,872 )
    Changes in operating assets and liabilities, net of business acquisitions:      
    Pawn service charges receivable   1,547       1,071  
    Inventory   (5,390 )     1,617  
    Prepaid expenses, other current assets and other assets   444       (8,699 )
    Accounts payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities   (45,490 )     (57,531 )
    Customer layaway deposits   9,640       886  
    Income taxes   (1,081 )     909  
    Net cash provided by operating activities   62,928       36,548  
    Investing activities:      
    Loans made   (484,611 )     (433,194 )
    Loans repaid   284,095       262,970  
    Recovery of pawn loan principal through sale of forfeited collateral   198,387       188,351  
    Capital expenditures, net   (13,966 )     (13,654 )
    Acquisitions, net of cash acquired   (79 )     (8,610 )
    Investment in unconsolidated affiliate   (509 )     (850 )
    Investment in other investments   —       (15,000 )
    Dividends from unconsolidated affiliates   1,902       1,745  
    Net cash used in investing activities   (14,781 )     (18,242 )
    Financing activities:      
    Taxes paid related to net share settlement of equity awards   (3,971 )     (3,253 )
    Proceeds from borrowings   300,000       —  
    Debt issuance cost   (5,310 )     —  
    Purchase and retirement of treasury stock   (3,997 )     (6,010 )
    Payments of finance leases   (266 )     (276 )
    Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities   286,456       (9,539 )
    Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash   328       (43 )
    Net increase in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash   334,931       8,724  
    Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash at beginning of period   179,807       228,968  
    Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash at end of period $ 514,738     $ 237,692  
           
    EZCORP, Inc.
    OPERATING SEGMENT RESULTS
       
      Three Months Ended March 31, 2025
    (Unaudited)
    (in thousands) U.S. Pawn   Latin America
    Pawn
      Other
    Investments
      Total Segments   Corporate
    Items
      Consolidated
                           
    Revenues:                      
    Merchandise sales $ 116,915     $ 52,552     $ —     $ 169,467     $ —     $ 169,467  
    Jewelry scrapping sales   16,898       4,040       —       20,938       —       20,938  
    Pawn service charges   87,548       28,323       —       115,871       —       115,871  
    Other revenues   24       16       —       40       —       40  
    Total revenues   221,385       84,931       —       306,316       —       306,316  
    Merchandise cost of goods sold   74,772       36,783       —       111,555       —       111,555  
    Jewelry scrapping cost of goods sold   13,235       3,074       —       16,309       —       16,309  
    Gross profit   133,378       45,074       —       178,452       —       178,452  
    Segment and corporate expenses (income):                      
    Store expenses   83,532       32,995       —       116,527       —       116,527  
    General and administrative   —       —       —       —       19,640       19,640  
    Depreciation and amortization   2,682       1,989       —       4,671       3,349       8,020  
    Loss on sale or disposal of assets and other   17       —       —       17       —       17  
    Interest expense   —       —       —       —       3,281       3,281  
    Interest income   —       (337 )     (605 )     (942 )     (933 )     (1,875 )
    Equity in net (income) loss of unconsolidated affiliates   —       —       (1,866 )     (1,866 )     361       (1,505 )
    Other expense (income)   4       (137 )     —       (133 )     68       (65 )
    Segment contribution $ 47,143     $ 10,564     $ 2,471     $ 60,178          
    Income (loss) before income taxes             $ 60,178     $ (25,766 )   $ 34,412  
                                       
      Three Months Ended March 31, 2024
    (Unaudited)
    (in thousands) U.S. Pawn   Latin America
    Pawn
      Other
    Investments
      Total Segments   Corporate
    Items
      Consolidated
                           
    Revenues:                      
    Merchandise sales $ 114,849     $ 49,838     $ —     $ 164,687     $ —     $ 164,687  
    Jewelry scrapping sales   12,686       1,028       —       13,714       —       13,714  
    Pawn service charges   80,010       27,153       —       107,163       —       107,163  
    Other revenues   29       15       31       75       —       75  
    Total revenues   207,574       78,034       31       285,639       —       285,639  
    Merchandise cost of goods sold   72,798       33,461       —       106,259       —       106,259  
    Jewelry scrapping cost of goods sold   10,794       994       —       11,788       —       11,788  
    Gross profit   123,982       43,579       31       167,592       —       167,592  
    Segment and corporate expenses (income):                      
    Store expenses   80,840       33,742       —       114,582       —       114,582  
    General and administrative   —       —       —       —       18,266       18,266  
    Depreciation and amortization   2,516       2,392       —       4,908       3,311       8,219  
    (Gain) loss on sale or disposal of assets and other   (30 )     (66 )     —       (96 )     99       3  
    Other income   —       —       —       —       (765 )     (765 )
    Interest expense   —       —       —       —       3,402       3,402  
    Interest income   —       (608 )     (633 )     (1,241 )     (1,641 )     (2,882 )
    Equity in net income of unconsolidated affiliates   —       —       (1,719 )     (1,719 )     —       (1,719 )
    Other expense (income)   —       1       14       15       (180 )     (165 )
    Segment contribution $ 40,656     $ 8,118     $ 2,369     $ 51,143          
    Income (loss) before income taxes             $ 51,143     $ (22,492 )   $ 28,651  
                                       
      Six Months Ended March 31, 2025
    (Unaudited)
    (in thousands) U.S. Pawn   Latin America
    Pawn
      Other
    Investments
      Total Segments   Corporate
    Items
      Consolidated
                           
    Revenues:                      
    Merchandise sales $ 245,715     $ 110,095     $ —     $ 355,810     $ —     $ 355,810  
    Jewelry scrapping sales   32,396       5,274       —       37,670       —       37,670  
    Pawn service charges   175,424       57,499       —       232,923       —       232,923  
    Other revenues   51       32       —       83       —       83  
    Total revenues   453,586       172,900       —       626,486       —       626,486  
    Merchandise cost of goods sold   156,328       77,051       —       233,379       —       233,379  
    Jewelry scrapping cost of goods sold   25,203       4,048       —       29,251       —       29,251  
    Gross profit   272,055       91,801       —       363,856       —       363,856  
    Segment and corporate expenses (income):                      
    Store expenses   166,621       66,357       —       232,978       —       232,978  
    General and administrative   —       —       —       —       38,309       38,309  
    Depreciation and amortization   5,399       4,035       —       9,434       6,921       16,355  
    Loss on sale or disposal of assets and other   17       8       —       25       —       25  
    Interest expense   —       —       —       —       6,428       6,428  
    Interest income   —       (539 )     (1,199 )     (1,738 )     (2,230 )     (3,968 )
    Equity in net (income) loss of unconsolidated affiliates   —       —       (3,489 )     (3,489 )     509       (2,980 )
    Other (income) loss   (7 )     (208 )     —       (215 )     1,128       913  
    Segment contribution   100,025       22,148     $ 4,688     $ 126,861          
    Income (loss) before income taxes             $ 126,861     $ (51,065 )   $ 75,796  
                                       
      Six Months Ended March 31, 2024
    (Unaudited)
    (in thousands) U.S. Pawn   Latin America
    Pawn
      Other
    Investments
      Total Segments   Corporate
    Items
      Consolidated
                           
    Revenues:                      
    Merchandise sales $ 240,362     $ 103,728     $ —     $ 344,090     $ —     $ 344,090  
    Jewelry scrapping sales   25,501       2,295       —       27,796       —       27,796  
    Pawn service charges   159,083       54,529       —       213,612       —       213,612  
    Other revenues   66       31       35       132       —       132  
    Total revenues   425,012       160,583       35       585,630       —       585,630  
    Merchandise cost of goods sold   151,507       69,962       —       221,469       —       221,469  
    Jewelry scrapping cost of goods sold   22,078       1,918       —       23,996       —       23,996  
    Gross profit   251,427       88,703       35       340,165       —       340,165  
    Segment and corporate expenses (income):                      
    Store expenses   158,095       67,042       —       225,137       —       225,137  
    General and administrative   —       —       —       —       34,809       34,809  
    Depreciation and amortization   5,140       4,731       —       9,871       6,913       16,784  
    (Gain) loss on sale or disposal of assets and other   (4 )     (262 )     —       (266 )     97       (169 )
    Other income   —       —       —       —       (765 )     (765 )
    Interest expense   —       —       —       —       6,842       6,842  
    Interest income   —       (1,028 )     (1,206 )     (2,234 )     (3,287 )     (5,521 )
    Equity in net income of unconsolidated affiliates   —       —       (2,872 )     (2,872 )     —       (2,872 )
    Other (income) expense   —       (47 )     15       (32 )     (404 )     (436 )
    Segment contribution $ 88,196     $ 18,267     $ 4,098     $ 110,561          
    Income (loss) before income taxes             $ 110,561     $ (44,205 )   $ 66,356  
                                       
    EZCORP, Inc.
    STORE COUNT ACTIVITY
    (Unaudited)
       
      Three Months Ended March 31, 2025
      U.S. Pawn
      Latin America
    Pawn
      Consolidated
                   
    As of December 31, 2024   542       741       1,283  
    New locations opened   —       9       9  
    Locations acquired   —       1       1  
    Locations combined or closed   —       (9 )     (9 )
    As of March 31, 2025   542       742       1,284  
                           
      Three Months Ended March 31, 2024
      U.S. Pawn   Latin America
    Pawn
      Consolidated
               
    As of December 31, 2023   530       707       1,237  
    New locations opened   —       9       9  
    Locations acquired   6       —       6  
    Locations combined or closed   (1 )     (5 )     (6 )
    As of March 31, 2024   535       711       1,246  
                           
      Six Months Ended March 31, 2025
      U.S. Pawn
      Latin America
    Pawn
      Consolidated
                   
    As of September 30, 2024   542       737       1,279  
    New locations opened   —       13       13  
    Locations acquired   —       1       1  
    Locations combined or closed   —       (9 )     (9 )
    As of March 31, 2025   542       742       1,284  
                           
      Six Months Ended March 31, 2024
      U.S. Pawn   Latin America
    Pawn
      Consolidated
               
    As of September 30, 2023   529       702       1,231  
    New locations opened   —       14       14  
    Locations acquired   7       —       7  
    Locations combined or closed   (1 )     (5 )     (6 )
    As of March 31, 2024   535       711       1,246  
                           

    Non-GAAP Financial Information (Unaudited)
    In addition to the financial information prepared in conformity with accounting U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”), we provide certain other non-GAAP financial information on a constant currency (“constant currency”) and adjusted basis. We use constant currency results to evaluate our Latin America Pawn operations, which are denominated primarily in Mexican pesos, Guatemalan quetzales and other Latin American currencies. We believe that presentation of constant currency and adjusted results is meaningful and useful in understanding the activities and business metrics of our operations and reflects an additional way of viewing aspects of our business that, when viewed with GAAP results, provides a more complete understanding of factors and trends affecting our business. We provide non-GAAP financial information for informational purposes and to enhance understanding of our GAAP consolidated financial statements. We use this non-GAAP financial information primarily to evaluate and compare operating results across accounting periods.

    Readers should consider the information in addition to, but not instead of or superior to, our financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP. This non-GAAP financial information may be determined or calculated differently by other companies, limiting the usefulness of those measures for comparative purposes.

    Constant currency results reported herein are calculated by translating consolidated balance sheet and consolidated statement of operations items denominated in local currency to U.S. dollars using the exchange rate from the prior-year comparable period, as opposed to the current period, in order to exclude the effects of foreign currency rate fluctuations. In addition, we have an equity method investment that is denominated in Australian dollars and is translated into U.S. dollars. We used the end-of-period rate for balance sheet items and the average closing daily exchange rate on a monthly basis during the appropriate period for statement of operations items. The end-of-period and approximate average exchange rates for each applicable currency as compared to U.S. dollars as of and for the three and six months ended March 31, 2025 and 2024 were as follows:

      March 31,   Three Months Ended
    March 31,
      Six Months Ended
    March 31,
      2025
      2024
      2025
      2024
      2025
      2024
                                                   
    Mexican peso   20.4       16.6       20.4       17.0       20.3       17.3  
    Guatemalan quetzal   7.6       7.6       7.6       7.6       7.5       7.6  
    Honduran lempira   25.2       24.4       25.2       24.4       25.0       24.4  
    Australian dollar   1.6       1.5       1.6       1.5       1.6       1.5  
                                                   

    Our statement of operations constant currency results reflect the monthly exchange rate fluctuations and so are not directly calculable from the above rates. Constant currency results, where presented, also exclude the foreign currency gain or loss.

    Miscellaneous Non-GAAP Financial Measures

      Three Months Ended
    March 31,
    (in millions) 2025   2024
           
    Net income $ 25.4     $ 21.5  
    Interest expense   3.3       3.4  
    Interest income   (1.9 )     (2.9 )
    Income tax expense   9.0       7.2  
    Depreciation and amortization   8.0       8.2  
    EBITDA $ 43.8     $ 37.4  
                   
      Total
    Revenues
      Gross
    Profit
      Income
    Before Tax
      Tax Effect   Net
    Income
      Diluted EPS   EBITDA
                               
    2025 Q2 Reported $ 306.3     $ 178.5     $ 34.4     $ 9.0     $ 25.4     $ 0.33     $ 43.8  
    FX Impact   —       —       0.1       —       0.1       —       0.1  
    Constant Currency   12.6       6.5       0.9       0.3       0.6       0.01       1.2  
    2025 Q2 Adjusted $ 318.9     $ 185.0     $ 35.4     $ 9.3     $ 26.1     $ 0.34     $ 45.1  
                                                           
      Total
    Revenues
      Gross
    Profit
      Income
    Before Tax
      Tax Effect   Net
    Income
      Diluted EPS   EBITDA
                               
    2024 Q2 Reported $ 285.6     $ 167.6     $ 28.7     $ 7.2     $ 21.5     $ 0.29     $ 37.4  
    Corporate Lease Termination   —       —       (0.8 )     (0.2 )     (0.6 )     (0.01 )     (0.8 )
    FX Impact   —       —       0.1       —       0.1       —       0.1  
    2024 Q2 Adjusted $ 285.6     $ 167.6     $ 28.0     $ 7.0     $ 21.0     $ 0.28     $ 36.7  
                                                           
      Three Months Ended
    March 31, 2025
      Six Months Ended
    March 31, 2025
    (in millions) U.S. Dollar
    Amount
      Percentage
    Change YOY
      U.S. Dollar
    Amount
      Percentage
    Change YOY
                   
    Consolidated revenues $ 306.3       7 %   $ 626.5       7 %
    Currency exchange rate fluctuations   12.6           22.0      
    Constant currency consolidated revenues $ 318.9       12 %   $ 648.5       11 %
                   
    Consolidated gross profit $ 178.5       6 %   $ 363.9       7 %
    Currency exchange rate fluctuations   6.5           11.3      
    Constant currency consolidated gross profit $ 185.0       10 %   $ 375.2       10 %
                   
    Consolidated net inventory $ 207.8       27 %   $ 207.8       27 %
    Currency exchange rate fluctuations   8.7           8.7      
    Constant currency consolidated net inventory $ 216.5       32 %   $ 216.5       32 %
                   
    Latin America Pawn gross profit $ 45.1       3 %   $ 91.8       3 %
    Currency exchange rate fluctuations   6.5           11.3      
    Constant currency Latin America Pawn gross profit $ 51.6       18 %   $ 103.1       16 %
                   
    Latin America Pawn PLO $ 62.4       1 %   $ 62.4       1 %
    Currency exchange rate fluctuations   10.0           10.0      
    Constant currency Latin America Pawn PLO $ 72.4       17 %   $ 72.4       17 %
                   
    Latin America Pawn PSC revenues $ 28.3       4 %   $ 57.5       5 %
    Currency exchange rate fluctuations   3.9           6.7      
    Constant currency Latin America Pawn PSC revenues $ 32.2       19 %   $ 64.2       18 %
                   
    Latin America Pawn merchandise sales $ 52.6       5 %   $ 110.1       6 %
    Currency exchange rate fluctuations   7.9           14.5      
    Constant currency Latin America Pawn merchandise sales $ 60.5       21 %   $ 124.6       20 %
                   
    Latin America Pawn segment profit before tax $ 10.6       30 %   $ 22.2       21 %
    Currency exchange rate fluctuations   1.0           2.0      
    Constant currency Latin America Pawn segment profit before tax $ 11.6       43 %   $ 24.2       32 %
                                   

    The MIL Network –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Cornyn Meets with DEA Administrator Nominee Terry Cole

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Texas John Cornyn
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), who serves as chair of the U.S. Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control for the 119th Congress, made the following remarks to media after meeting with Terry Cole, whom President Trump has nominated to serve as Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA):
    “The single biggest challenge DEA faces is the flood of fentanyl and other synthetic opioids across the border.”
    “I look forward to visiting with him and our new ambassador down in Mexico City in the coming weeks to try to figure out what we can do more to try to help deal with this challenge, which has taken the lives of so many Americans here on this on this side of the border.”
    “I’m the Chairman of the International Narcotics Caucus this session, and we will be holding a variety of hearings about policy changes that we can do – additional resources, better authorities – to not only go after the threat and to stop it before it gets to our neighborhoods and communities across Texas and across the country.”
    “I look forward to introducing the nominee and supporting his confirmation.”

    This image is in the public domain, but those wishing to do so may credit the Office of U.S. Senator John Cornyn.
    Senator John Cornyn, a Republican from Texas, is a member of the Senate Finance, Judiciary, Intelligence, Foreign Relations, and Budget Committees.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Video: Non-Proliferation, Financing for Development & other topics – Daily Press Briefing | United Nations

    Source: United Nations (Video News)

    Noon Briefing by Stéphane Dujarric, Spokesperson for the Secretary-General.

    Highlights:
    Financing for Development
    Deputy Secretary-General
    Victims of Terrorism Associations’ Network
    Trust Fund in Support of Victims of Sexual Exploitation and Abuse
    International Court of Justice
    Occupied Palestinian Territory
    Lebanon/Israel
    Yemen
    Sudan
    Afghanistan
    Myanmar
    Security Council
    International Day
    Resident Coordinator – Samoa
    Financial Contribution
    Briefings Today

    FINANCING FOR DEVELOPMENT
    This morning, the Secretary-General, as you heard, spoke at the Economic and Social Council Forum on Financing for Development.
    He said that, as we prepare for the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Sevilla in July, we are facing some harsh truths: donors are pulling the plug on aid commitments, the Sustainable Development Goals are dramatically off track and high borrowing costs are draining away public investments.
    But, the more dangerous truth is that collaboration is being questioned with the ongoing trade wars. The Secretary-General said trade is a prime example of the benefits of international cooperation, and trade barriers are a clear and present danger to the global economy and sustainable development.
    These are tough times, he said, but it is in difficult periods that the imperative for responsible, sustainable investment is even more critical.

    DEPUTY SECRETARY-GENERAL
    The Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed is in Montevideo, Uruguay. Today, she met with the President of Uruguay, Yamandú Orsi, to discuss the country’s development priorities and their alignment with the Sustainable Development Goals.
    Later today, she will meet with several Government Ministers to discuss the partnership between the United Nations and Uruguay. She is also meeting youth groups, civil society, and of course the country team of the United Nations.
    And over the weekend, she chaired the annual regional retreat with UN Resident Coordinators from across Latin America and the Caribbean.
    Ms. Mohammed will leave Uruguay later today and will be back here tomorrow evening.

    VICTIMS OF TERRORISM ASSOCIATIONS’ NETWORK
    This morning, our friends at the Office of Counter-Terrorism launched the Victims of Terrorism Associations’ Network. This is an initiative that brings together victims of terrorism and victims’ associations from across the globe to drive collective action to support victims’ rights and needs.
    The network aims to provide a safe space for victims and survivors of terrorism to support each other, build resilience and engage as advocates, as educators, and as peacebuilders.
    The development of the network was supported by a financial contribution from Spain.
    The network was launched during an event this morning – and it is already available on UN Webtv. More information on the website of the office of Counter-terrorism.

    Full Highlights: https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/noon-briefing-highlight?date%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=28%20April%202025

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMJiomcK2rY

    MIL OSI Video –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: ‘White Lotus’ music: When talented creators strive to realize their visions, differences and chattering can erupt

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By James Deaville, Professor of Music, Carleton University

    After the first two seasons of The White Lotus (set respectively in Hawaii and Sicily), the buzz in the media and on social media typically focused on the selection of the next site for the award-winning show.

    Not so much in 2025, after the close of Season 3’s Thailand-based episodes. Instead, the internet and social media have been alive with chatter over the announcement by Canadian Chilean composer Cristóbal Tapia de Veer that he was quitting the mega-hit franchise to the shock and disappointment of many of the show’s fans.

    Tapia de Veer revealed his intention in an interview with the New York Times published April 2, just four days before the season’s finale, which aired to a series-record viewership. His departure announcement, twinned with criticism of White Lotus writer, creator and showrunner Mike White, has highlighted issues with creative tensions behind such collaborative productions.

    ‘The White Lotus’ Season 3 opening theme song.

    Acclaimed music

    The Québec-trained composer’s 2022 and 2023 music-related White Lotus Emmy awards recognize his aural contributions to the highly awarded hit series. The music’s idiosyncratic mixture of a recognizable theme, bizarre vocalizations and site-based instrumentation has received a lot of popular attention and acclaim.




    Read more:
    HBO’s ‘The White Lotus’: Eerie music heightens drama of rich people’s bad behaviour and emotional dysfunction


    In contrast, some members of the public reacted with hostility toward this season’s theme music. This was partly because it did not use the identifiable thematic material that bound together the first seasons: a four-note theme that has been transliterated as “ooh-loo-loo-loos” and was the basis for the title theme music in the first two seasons.

    The Season 3 theme nevertheless sounds familiar due to Tapia de Veer’s ongoing quirky use of the voice. Novel ways of using it have been the foundations of all the Lotus themes, and in Season 3, it imitated monkey sounds.

    As White said in a statement about the show: “There’s this kind of conflict between wanting to be this spiritual creature that has an idealism and working towards something that’s some semblance of goodness, and then there’s this antic monkey side that keeps putting you in situations that are compromised.”

    ‘Ooh-loo-loos’ and creative differences

    Still, Tapia de Veer said he knew his novel Season 3 approach was a “kind of a risk,” to the extent that he produced an extended version with the traditional “ooh-loo-loo-loos” for insertion later in the show, but White rejected the idea.

    According to the composer, White wanted “more of a ‘chill, sexy vibe’” compared to Tapia de Veer’s more experimental tracks. On the Howard Stern Show, when asked what happened, White had a different perspective, saying: “I honestly don’t know what happened. Reading the interviews … I just don’t think he respected me.”

    The director said he didn’t think they had fought, and expressed dismay that Tapia de Veer brought criticisms and perceived differences to the media.

    To this, Tapia de Veer told the BBC he went public because White hadn’t handled the news “in a normal business manner,” and he said White’s comments on the Stern show demonstrated the director doesn’t fully appreciate the importance of the music on the show.

    On his YouTube channel, Tapia de Veer has uploaded another variant of the theme (“Enlightenment”) under the track title “Full Moon Party,” as well as a 45-minute loop of the 11-note theme.

    What unites the Season 3 tracks is the leaping, non-melodic theme, repeated over and over in changing synthesizer settings. The composer has said no soundtrack album for Season 3 will be forthcoming.




    Read more:
    HBO’s ‘The White Lotus’: Eerie music heightens drama of rich people’s bad behaviour and emotional dysfunction


    Scores gives unity through themes

    The positions of White and Tapia de Veer equally suggest a lack of effective communication, and as named or all but named by both parties, a lack of respect. Both are crucial elements behind the interpersonal relationships required in audiovisual production.

    In the traditional collaboration, the composer falls under the leadership of the director or showrunner, not least because the music is the final audiovisual element added to the mix.

    ‘The White Lotus’ music making, video from Cristóbal Tapia de Veer.

    By the time the film text reaches the composer, the visual track and dialogue have been locked — shooting is completed — yet it lacks the decisive contribution the score makes in defining characters, establishing moods and atmospheres, and giving unity to the whole through recurring themes.

    The composer may work at their own keyboard or digital audio workstation, yet customarily in collaboration with the project’s other creative forces, especially the director.

    Notorious score differences

    Differences between film directors or television producers and composers are not new, the most notorious being Stanley Kubrick’s rejection of Alex North’s score for 2001: A Space Odyssey. This was in favour of the music Kubrick had chosen to temporarily accompany the visual track.

    In another well-known instance, Alfred Hitchcock — under pressure from executives at Universal — replaced the Torn Curtain score (1966) by long-term collaborator Bernard Herrmann with more contemporary-sounding music by John Addison, which ended the decade-long association of composer and director.

    More recently, Gabriel Yared’s score for Troy (2004), directed by Wolfgang Petersen, was replaced with one by James Horner, because test audiences disapproved of Yared’s music.

    Composer withdrawls rare

    With The White Lotus, however, we have a composer walking away from a job in a very public way. A composer’s resignation is not without precedent, yet it remains considerably rarer than their firing. Major film scorer Dmitri Tiomkin withdrew from two early 1960s projects directed by Robert Aldrich, but because of other commitments rather than any disagreement.

    In contrast, Leonard Bernstein did threaten to walk away from West Side Story in 1949 over creative tensions with writer Arthur Laurents — still, this was communicated privately.

    Canadian composer Howard Shore withdrew from Peter Jackson’s King Kong (2005), but in this case, Shore said the parting was amicable and related to “differing creative aspirations.”

    Future seasons?

    The drama around White Lotus music is unique because both director and composer have talked with the press.

    If we look beyond the specifics of the music, however, we realize that this is not just about a (new) theme song and its use (or non-use) in the series. Rather, the “differences” cut to the heart of the often fraught working relationship between highly talented creators who strive to realize their visions.

    What does this mean for the music for Season 4 of The White Lotus? White has not suggested a successor, so commentators have fixated on the disagreements over Season 3 rather than speculating about a future sound. We will have to wait and listen.

    James Deaville 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. ‘White Lotus’ music: When talented creators strive to realize their visions, differences and chattering can erupt – https://theconversation.com/white-lotus-music-when-talented-creators-strive-to-realize-their-visions-differences-and-chattering-can-erupt-254032

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Impact of the closure of USAID on Latin America, in particular on the seven million Venezuelan refugees – E-000576/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission has taken note with regret of the announcement by the United States (US) Secretary of State that 83% of all United States Agency for International Development (USAID) assistance programs will be terminated and acknowledges the significant humanitarian and development impact of such decision, particularly in Latin America and the Caribbean, where the presence of USAID has played a significant role in supporting vulnerable populations, including Venezuelan vulnerable refugees and migrants.

    The EU has long been at the forefront of supporting global humanitarian and development efforts and has so far contributed to the organisation of four international conferences[1] in solidarity with Venezuelan vulnerable refugees and migrants and their host countries. The scale and complexity of the current global needs require a collective response.

    While the Commission cannot replace the scale of assistance provided by the US, it remains committed to its engagement and continues to provide support to displaced Venezuelans in several host countries (including in Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Costa Rica and Mexico) by contributing to socioeconomic integration, access to decent jobs and social protection systems.

    The EU will continue delivering humanitarian assistance to vulnerable people in the region, in a principled manner and on the basis of humanitarian needs.

    The Commission continues to call for an international response to the Venezuelan migration crisis, as it requires shared responsibility. While the US decision generates new challenges, the EU will continue working in a collective approach to uphold its commitments in Latin America and the Caribbean and beyond.

    • [1] https://civil-protection-humanitarian-aid.ec.europa.eu/where/latin-america-and-caribbean/venezuela/2023-international-conference-solidarity-venezuelan-refugees-and-migrants-and-their-host-countries_en
    Last updated: 28 April 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Latest news – Next meeting of DAND delegation: Thursday 22 May 2025, 14.00-15.00 – Delegation for relations with the countries of the Andean Community

    Source: European Parliament

    The next meeting of the EP’s Delegation for relations with the countries of the Andean Community (DAND) has been scheduled for:

    Thursday, 22 May 2025, 14.00-15.00

    Room: SPINELLI 1E2

    This meeting will focus on the preparation of the next inter-parliamentary meeting EU-Peru and the presidential and legislative elections held in Ecuador on 13 April 2025.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Foreign National Indicted For Buying A Fraudulent Social Security Card And Possessing A Fake Green Card

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Tampa, Florida – United States Attorney Gregory W. Kehoe announces the return of an indictment charging Carlos Alberto Urribarri Dominguez (34), a Venezuelan national, with knowingly buying a fraudulent Social Security card and possessing a fake U.S. Permanent Resident Card, commonly known as a “Green Card.” If convicted for the Social Security card offense, Urribarri Dominguez faces a maximum penalty of five years in federal prison. The Greed Card offense carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in federal prison.

    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).

    An indictment is merely a formal charge that a defendant has committed one or more violations of federal criminal law, and every defendant is presumed innocent unless, and until, proven guilty.

    This case was investigated by the United States Border Patrol, the Department of Veterans Affairs Office of the Inspector General, and the Veterans Affairs Police Department. It will be prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Adam W. McCall.

    MIL Security OSI –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: U.S. Reps. Frost, Garcia, Ansari, and Dexter Arrive in El Salvador to Pressure Trump Administration To Abide By Supreme Court Order And Facilitate Return of Wrongly Deported Maryland Man, Kilmar Abrego Garcia

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Maxwell Frost Florida (10th District)

    April 20, 2025

    San Salvador, El Salvador – Today, U.S. Representatives Maxwell Frost (D-FL), Robert Garcia (D-CA), Yassamin Ansari (D-AZ), and Maxine Dexter (D-OR) announced that they have arrived in El Salvador to pressure the Trump Administration to abide by a Supreme Court order to facilitate the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland man with protected legal status who was unlawfully deported by the Trump Administration. Mr. Abrego Garcia is currently detained in El Salvador despite having no criminal conviction in the United States, a direct violation of due process protected by the Constitution. 

    The Congressional Members are in El Salvador to bring attention to President Trump’s illegal defiance of the binding and unanimous Supreme Court decision in Noem v. Abrego Garcia that demands the Administration facilitate Abrego Garcia’s return and due process in the United States. 

    This visit comes after the Trump Administration admitted that Mr. Abrego Garcia’s detention was an “error” but refused to abide by a federal judge and the Supreme Court’s orders to facilitate Mr. Abrego Garcia’s return home. Members will also advocate for other detainees who are being held without due process. 

    This trip is not being financed by taxpayer dollars and comes after Chairman James Comer refused to approve Garcia and Frost’s request for an official CODEL.

    “Donald Trump and his Administration are running a government-funded kidnapping program– illegally arresting, jailing, and deporting innocent people with zero due process. Kilmar Abrego Garcia is Trump’s latest victim,” said Congressman Maxwell Frost. “As Members of Congress it is our responsibility to hold the President and Administration accountable for defying the constitution of the United States. Donald Trump and ICE are not above the law. Today it’s Kilmar, but tomorrow it could be anyone else. We cannot and will not let Donald Trump get away with this.”

    “While Donald Trump continues to defy the Supreme Court, Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia is being held illegally in El Salvador after being wrongfully deported,” said Congressman Robert Garcia. “That is why we’re here– to remind the American people that kidnapping immigrants and deporting them without due process is not how we do things in America. We are demanding the Trump Administration abide by the Supreme Court decision and give Kilmar and the other migrants mistakenly sent to El Salvador due process in the United States.”

    “My parents fled an authoritarian regime in Iran where people were ‘disappeared’ – I refuse to sit back and watch it happen here, too. Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s illegal abduction and President Trump’s complete disregard of due process and a unanimous Supreme Court ruling are deeply disturbing. We should all be appalled by this treatment by the United States government,” said Congresswoman Yassamin Ansari. “I’m in El Salvador to advocate for the Trump Administration to facilitate his safe return home, and make sure Trump’s attack on our Constitution and due process stops now. Trump has already threatened to illegally deport ‘home-growns’ and American citizens. If this can happen to Mr. Abrego Garcia, it can happen to any of us. This is a constitutional crisis. ”

    “What happened to Kilmar Abrego Garcia is not just one family’s nightmare—it is a constitutional crisis that should outrage every single one of us,” said Congresswoman Maxine Dexter. “We will not rest while due process is discarded, and our constitutional rights are ignored. We will be loud in demanding that the Trump Administration abide by the Supreme Court’s decision and uphold the rule of law. Because if this can happen to Mr. Abrego Garcia, it can happen to anyone.”

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: PROMISES MADE, PROMISES KEPT: Border Security Achieved in Fewer Than 100 Days

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    Since President Donald J. Trump took office, he and his administration have ushered in the most secure border in modern American history — and he didn’t need legislation to do it. President Trump has made good on the promises he made on the campaign trail to usher in an unprecedented era of homeland security.
    Here are a few of those promises:
    PROMISE MADE: “We will close the border. We will stop the invasion of illegals into our country.” (10/12/24, Aurora, CO)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    Illegal border encounters are down by 95%.
    Illegal immigrant “gotaways” — the top threat to public safety — are down by 99%.
    Fox News correspondent Bill Melugin: “If Fox were to send me down there right now, I would have trouble finding a single migrant on camera.”
    CBS immigration reporter Camilo Montoya-Galvez: “Typically, when we go to the U.S./Mexico border, we at least see one group of people who are trying to cross into the U.S. illegally. We did not see a single migrant.”
    The Wall Street Journal: Border Crossings Grind to Halt as Trump’s Tough Policies Take Hold
    The New York Times: How Trump’s Hard-Line Tactics Are Driving Down Migration
    CBS News: Amid Trump crackdown, illegal border crossings plunge to levels not seen in decades
    Axios: Border crossings plunge to lowest levels in decades: New data
    New York Post: Northern border sector previously overrun by illegal migrants sees dramatic drop in crossings: ‘We haven’t seen anyone since November’
    The Times: This city was a border flashpoint. Now the only migrants are quail
    Reuters: Migrant arrests at US-Mexico border in March lowest ever recorded
    Bloomberg: US-Bound Migration Plunges 99% Along Panama Jungle Route
    The Washington Times: Under Trump, border catch-and-release has dropped 99.99% from worst Biden month
    Los Angeles Times: California-Mexico border, once overwhelmed, now nearly empty
    PROMISE MADE: “We will expel every single illegal alien gang member and migrant criminal operating on American soil and remove the savage gang, Tren de Aragua, from the United States.” (1/19/25, Washington, D.C.)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    President Trump designated Tren de Aragua, MS-13, and other vicious gangs and cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations.
    Department of Justice: 27 Members or Associates of Tren de Aragua Charged with Racketeering, Narcotics, Sex Trafficking, Robbery and Firearms offenses
    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem: “Under President Trump, we have arrested over 150,000 aliens — including more than 600 members of the vicious Tren de Aragua gang.”
    The Trump Administration directed the successful apprehension of a key MS-13 gang leader — an illegal immigrant living in Virginia and operating as one of the top three MS-13 leaders in the U.S.
    The Trump Administration directed the successful arrests of three illegal immigrant MS-13 gang members in Florida, wanted on first-degree murder charges, and another high-ranking MS-13 member in New York, linked to 11 murders.
    ICE arrested 370+ illegal immigrants as part of a major operation in Massachusetts — many of whom have serious criminal convictions and charges, including murder, child rape, fentanyl trafficking, and armed robbery.
    PROMISE MADE: “On Day One … We will begin the largest deportation operation in the history of our country.” (10/21/24, Concord, NC)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    New York Post: Trump’s mass deportation raids result in 655% spike in arrests of terrorists roaming US — including one of India’s ‘most wanted’
    Since President Trump took office, there have been 139,000 deportations.
    In President Trump’s first 50 days, ICE arrested 32,809 illegal immigrants — nearly 75% of whom were accused or convicted criminals — virtually the same number of arrests over the entirety of Biden’s final year in office.

    NBC News: Immigration enforcement operations ramp up in cities across the U.S.
    PROMISE MADE: “I will immediately end the Biden border nightmare that traffickers are using to exploit vulnerable women and children.” (7/21/23)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    The number of unaccompanied illegal immigrant children reached a record low.
    At its peak under Biden, 4.6% of illegal border crossings were unaccompanied minors — many of whom were victims of trafficking. In the first two weeks of March under President Trump, just 0.4% of illegal crossings were unaccompanied minors.

    PROMISE MADE: “Under my leadership, we will seal it up and expand that wall until we have total control.” (3/4/23, National Harbor, MD)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    PROMISE MADE: “You have the gotaways. You know what the gotaways are? It’s the people that don’t want to be looked at at all. So, they’re worse than the people we’re seeing that’s why they don’t want to be looked at.” (11/3/24, Macon, GA)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    Border Czar Tom Homan: “Known gotaways — people we knew crossed the border … weren’t apprehended, weren’t fingerprinted, weren’t vetted. Average day under Joe Biden? More than 1,800 gotaways. Yesterday? 38 — 38 too many, but we’ll get that to zero. We went from 1,800 [per day] to 38.”
    Fox News’s Bill Melugin: “Border Patrol’s nationwide recorded gotaways have plummeted to a stunningly low daily average of just 77 over the last 21 days, according to internal CBP data we’ve reviewed. President Biden averaged 1,837 gotaways per day in fiscal year 2023 at the height of the crisis, totaling 670,674 for the year.”
    PROMISE MADE: “I will ban all welfare and federal benefits for illegals, and then they won’t come.” (10/29/24, Allentown, PA)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    President Trump signed an executive order to ensure taxpayer resources are not used to incentivize or support illegal immigration.
    The Trump Administration ended food stamps for illegal immigrants.
    The Trump Administration “clawed back” tens of millions paid to house illegal aliens in luxury NYC hotels and ended a $40 million contract to “improve … inclusion of sedentary migrants.”
    The Department of Education revoked waivers that allowed certain colleges to divert federal funds intended for low-income students and students with disabilities to illegal immigrants.
    PROMISE MADE: “I will end catch-and-release.” (10/12/24, Aurora, CO)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    Since taking office, the Trump Administration has arrested 150,000+ illegal immigrants, deported 139,000+ illegal immigrants, and released just nine illegal immigrants into the U.S. — a staggering 99.99% decrease over the same period last year under Biden.
    New York Post: Trump orders Border Patrol to immediately stop setting illegal migrants free in the US: ‘Catch and release is ended’
    The Washington Times: Under Trump, border catch-and-release has dropped 99.99% from worst Biden month
    PROMISE MADE: “My administration will deliver justice for every family whose loved one has been stolen from them by migrant crime, including Laken Riley, Rachel Morin, Jocelyn Nungaray, Kayla Hamilton, and every other precious American soul that we have lost to these animals. Their memories will live in their hearts forever and our hearts forever, and we will never, ever forget them.” (1/19/25, Washington, D.C.)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    Fox News: Trump signs Laken Riley Act into law as first legislative victory in new administration
    Newsweek: Laken Riley’s Mom Says Trump Didn’t Forget Her Daughter as Bill is Signed
    The Hill: Trump signs Laken Riley Act, marking first legislative win of second term
    PROMISE MADE: “I will invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. Think of that. 1798, this was put there. 1798 — that’s a long time ago, right? To target and dismantle every migrant criminal network operating on American soil.” (10/12/24, Aurora, CO)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    The White House: Invocation of the Alien Enemies Act Regarding the Invasion of The United States by Tren De Aragua
    The New York Times: Trump Invoked the Alien Enemies Act to Speed Up Deportations
    PROMISE MADE: “Kamala’s app for illegals will be shut down immediately — within 24 hours.” (10/12/24, Aurora, CO)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    NBC News: Trump shuts down immigration app, dashing migrants’ hopes of entering U.S.
    The New York Times: Trump Shuts Down Migrant Entry App, Signaling the Start of His Crackdown
    Fox News: Up to 1M migrants who used Biden’s CBP One app ordered to deport by Trump admin
    PROMISE MADE: “Today, I am announcing a new plan to end all sanctuary cities in North Carolina and all across our country… and we will bring down the full weight of the federal government on any jurisdiction that refuses to cooperate.” (9/21/24, Wilmington, NC)
    PROMISE KEPT:
    Politico: Fresh executive order targets sanctuary cities, federal aid for undocumented migrants
    Reuters: Trump steps up immigration crackdown, warns city, state officials against interference
    The Wall Street Journal: Trump Plans to Withhold All Federal Funding From Sanctuary Cities
    Politico: Trump administration sues New York over sanctuary policies for undocumented immigrants
    AP: Trump administration sues Chicago in latest crackdown on ‘sanctuary’ cities

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Tampa Mother Torn from Family; Rep. Kathy Castor Urges Swift Action to Reunite

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Reprepsentative Kathy Castor (FL14)

    TAMPA, Fla. – Today, U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor (FL-14) urged President Trump to immediately grant humanitarian parole for Heidy Sánchez, a Tampa mother who was ripped away from her infant daughter and husband and unlawfully deported to Cuba:

    “It is unconscionable and wrong for your ICE personnel to harm families in this way. Ms. Sánchez is entitled to due process, and her husband and daughter (both U.S. citizens) deserve to be treated with the dignity we value as Americans,” wrote Rep. Castor. “Ms. Sánchez’s husband, Carlos Yuniel Valle, advised me that the separation of mother and daughter was so sudden and traumatic that their infant daughter was taken to the hospital. The baby was still breastfeeding at the time your Administration tore them apart, and the baby’s ongoing health issues require her mother’s return to the U.S. as soon as possible. Ms. Sánchez, a mother and home health aide, was complying with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) request to regularly check in at the local Tampa office.

    Rep. Castor continued, “The treatment of the Sánchez-Valle family is a deep stain on your Administration and is repugnant to American values and constitutional protections, but it does not have to be this way. You have the authority to grant humanitarian parole to Ms. Sánchez and reunite this family today in Tampa. I urge you to do so immediately.”

    Read the full letter here:

    Dear President Trump: 

    I write to call out the cruel and unlawful treatment of Heidy Sánchez from Tampa, Florida who was ripped away from her infant daughter and husband last Thursday and transported to Cuba. I urge you to grant Ms. Sánchez humanitarian parole and return her to her family in Tampa immediately. 

    Ms. Sánchez’s husband, Carlos Yuniel Valle, advised me that the separation of mother and daughter was so sudden and traumatic that their infant daughter was taken to the hospital. The baby was still breastfeeding at the time your Administration tore them apart, and the baby’s ongoing health issues require her mother’s return to the U.S. as soon as possible. Ms. Sánchez, a mother and home health aide, was complying with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) request to regularly check in at the local Tampa office. During her appointment last Tuesday, she was unceremoniously ripped away from her daughter and husband and transported to Cuba. 

    It is unconscionable and wrong for your ICE personnel to harm families in this way. Ms. Sánchez is entitled to due process, and her husband and daughter (both U.S. citizens) deserve to be treated with the dignity we value as Americans. Due to the suffocating oppression in Cuba and lack of essentials like food and clean water, Ms. Sánchez should not be trafficked to a country where she will be harmed and suffer. 

    You attended the funeral of Pope Francis over the weekend, so I recommend that you honor his memory by acting consistently with his recent admonition that we are “called upon to consider the legitimacy of norms and public policies in the light of the dignity of the person and his or her fundamental rights.” 

    The treatment of the Sánchez-Valle family is a deep stain on your Administration and is repugnant to American values and constitutional protections, but it does not have to be this way. You have the authority to grant humanitarian parole to Ms. Sánchez and reunite this family today in Tampa. I urge you to do so immediately.

    Sincerely,

    MIL OSI USA News –

    April 29, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Lightspark: Built for the Next Century of Money

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LOS ANGELES, April 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Three years ago, Lightspark started with a simple conviction: The way money moves should match the speed, openness, and intelligence of the Internet itself. Since then, the world has responded to a new kind of value — digital, borderless, and instant. But the infrastructure to move that value remains outdated, closed, cumbersome, and expensive.

    Everything Lightspark does aims to change that.

    Today, Lightspark unveils a bold new identity that reflects who they are and where they’re going. It’s a system designed for developers ready to move beyond the constraints of legacy infrastructure and toward faster, more innovative, and more open payments.

    A Brand Built for the Network Lightspark’s Building

    Lightspark’s new identity reflects how money is evolving. Not just a new logo or color palette – it’s a design system built to move as dynamically as the network behind it. Lightspark has rethought everything — from typography to motion — to echo the principles that drive us: open access, instant settlement, global reach. This is the new face of a faster financial future. Powered by Bitcoin and built on the Money Grid.

    Lightspark’s technology is already powering some of the most important financial experiences in the world:

    • Instant Bitcoin payments on Coinbase
    • Seamless payouts via UMA between the US, Mexico, Latin America, Asia and Europe
    • Real-time settlement for exchanges, wallets, and digital banks
    • Stablecoin issuance on Bitcoin via Spark

    The New Mark: Beyond the Bolt

    Lightspark is moving beyond the lightning bolt. The new mark signals the origin point of the Money Grid — inspired by the Cartesian co-ordinate system’s X, Y, and Z axes and the Right-Hand Rule from physics, a principle used in electromagnetism that connects to light waves—a nod to Lightspark’s name and mission. The design symbolizes precision, direction, and interconnected movement, reinforcing the role in powering a more efficient and intelligent global financial network. More than a symbol. It’s a navigation point for the Money Grid.

    Typography: Precision, Clarity, and Scale

    At the foundation of Lightspark’s new identity is Suisse Int’l—a modern interpretation of the classic Swiss Grotesk. Chosen for its clean geometry, timeless clarity, and international versatility, it reflects the qualities Lightspark values in the infrastructure built: strength, reliability, and precision.

    Suisse Int’l brings a functional elegance that allows information, not decoration, to lead. Its wide range of weights, global character support, and structural harmony make it ideal for scaling across surfaces, from product UIs to international campaigns. It’s a typographic system built for clear communication at scale, designed to move as fluidly as the Money Grid Lightspark is powering.

    A Palette Built to Move

    Money doesn’t stop at borders — and neither does Lightspark’s color system. Designed to be bold, expressive, and highly functional, Lightspark’s palette reflects the extensible nature of the Money Grid itself. This is a working color system from high-visibility colors used in interfaces and signals, like Spark, Universal Money Address, and Connect, to a range of neutral tones for structure and contrast. One that scales across products, touchpoints, and cultures. The palette is clean where it needs to be, and loud when necessary. It’s built for scale and flexible enough to adapt to how color is seen, felt, and used across cultures.

    Bringing it all Together

    The future doesn’t need to be imagined; it’s here. With Lightspark’s partners – digital banks, crypto exchanges, non-custodial wallets, developers, marketplaces, and the entrepreneurs shaping the Money Grid – Lightspark is just getting started.

    The MIL Network –

    April 29, 2025
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