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US Congress passes 45-day surveillance law extension

By AJ Vicens

Reuters

April 30 (Reuters) - Congress on Thursday passed a 45-day extension of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, prolonging ‌a debate about a section of the spy law that ‌critics say enables the abusive surveillance of American citizens.

The law was set to expire ​at midnight on Thursday after having already been extended for 10 days on April 20.

Proponents of the law, which allows warrantless searches of data scooped up by America’s intelligence agencies, say it provides authorities ‌with an unparalleled tool ⁠to protect U.S. national security. Critics say it gives law enforcement an end run around constitutional protections against ⁠unreasonable search and seizure, and they have long sought to add a warrant requirement.

The extension comes after the House passed a bill on ​Wednesday that ​included restrictions on the Federal Reserve’s ​ability to issue digital currency, ‌something Senate Republican leaders saw as a non-starter.

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With time dwindling to hammer out the differences between the House and Senate, lawmakers decided to punt, passing the extension in the Senate via unanimous consent and a 261-111 vote in the House.

The extension is likely to ‌do little more than draw out the ​fight over renewal ever further.

Reformers are ​still pressing for a warrant ​requirement. The White House, the intelligence community and ‌Congressional leadership have all lobbied furiously ​for the renewal ​of the law without one, saying past abuses had been addressed as part of 2024 reforms.

“I don’t know what they think, ​what’s going to ‌change in 45 days,” said Pennsylvania Republican Representative Scott Perry, ​who voted against the Senate’s extension.

(Reporting by AJ Vicens ​in Detroit, Editing by Chris Reese)

US Congress passes 45-day surveillance law extension

By AJ Vicens April 30 (Reuters) - Congress on Thursday passed a 45-day extension of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, pr...
Ex-cellmate says he found suicide note from Jeffrey Epstein

A suicide note purportedly written by the convicted sex offenderJeffrey Epsteinis locked inside the case file of his former cellmate, convicted quadruple murderer Nicholas Tartaglione, who told The New York Times it was written on paper from a yellow legal pad and tucked inside a book.

ABC News

According to the Times, Tartaglione found the note in July 2019, after Epstein unsuccessfully tried to kill himself -- about two weeks before Epsteindied by suicidein his lower Manhattan jail cell.

Epstein was found in his cell on July 23, 2019, "with a homemade noose fashioned around his neck," according to a Bureau of Prisons incident report.

New date set for Bondi deposition in House Oversight's Epstein probe after Democrat threatens contempt

Epstein was "lying in the fetal position on the floor of his cell wearing a t-shirt and boxers. He was breathing heavily and was snoring. ... His neck was red with no abrasions," the report said. Epstein was "determined to have sustained a circular line of erythema at the base of the neck and friction marks on the front of neck."

According to the report, At first Epstein alleged that his cellmate, Tartaglione, had tried to kill him, an allegation he did not repeat. He later said he could not recall what happened. Tartaglione has denied attempting to harm Epstein.

Tartaglione first mentioned the existence of the purported suicide note in a podcast last year.

"It said something like 'FBI, you know, looked into me for months and found nothing.' Then he wrote, 'What do you want me to do? Cry about it?' And he was weird because he wrote a smiley face, and then he wrote 'time to say goodbye,'" Tartaglione said on the podcast.

New York State Sex Offender Registry - PHOTO: This photo provided by the New York State Sex Offender Registry shows Jeffrey Epstein, March 28, 2017.

The note is now part of a sealed file in Tartaglione's criminal case. The New York Times on Thursday filed a petition with a federal judge to have the alleged note unsealed, arguing that Tartaglione has publicly discussed it and that a two-page chronology document about the alleged note was included in the Justice Department'srecent disclosuresof Epstein files.

U.S. District Judge Kenneth Karas ordered the parties to the case to respond to the Times unsealing request by May 4.

Federal prosecutors from the Southern District of New York did not know of any suicide note written by Epstein, sources familiar with the matter told ABC News, but a two-page chart contained in the Justice Department's Epstein files referenced it.

"Sometime between 7/23 and 7/27, NT found the note," the chart said, referencing Nicholas Tartaglione by his initials.

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The chart said Tartaglione's lawyer, Bruce Barket, authenticated the note in January 2020 but did not say how.

Reached by ABC News on Thursday, Barket declined to comment because the matter is sealed.

DOJ internal watchdog to review department's compliance with Epstein Files Transparency Act

"The entire Epstein affair, as it relates to Nick, is under seal, not just the supposed note, if there is one," Barket said.

After the first possible suicide attempt, Epstein himself denied he was suicidal during a "suicide risk assessment" he underwent while in jail.

"Inmate Epstein denied any past or present suicidal ideation, intention or plan. He denied ever engaging in any suicide attempts or self-injurious behavior in the past," the evaluation said. "He stated he lives to have fun, to enjoy life, and to learn. He said his future plans include fighting his case and going back to his normal life."

Epstein was taken off suicide watch the following day, July 24, 2019, but was kept under psychological evaluation.

"Mr. Epstein stated, 'I have no interest in killing myself,' a staff psychologist at the Metropolitan Correctional Center wrote in a report. "He explained although his situation is 'not perfect' due to his being incarcerated, he noted he has 'lots to do for [his] legal case.' He described having a 'wonderful life,' to include interactions with 'interesting people and projects.' He said 'it would be crazy' to take his life. He furthered, 'I would not do that to myself.'"

Judge throws out Trump's $10B lawsuit against WSJ over Epstein reporting

Epstein, a wealthy financier who owned two private islands in the Virgin Islands, came under investigation for allegedly luring minor girls to his seaside home in Palm Beach, Florida, for massages that turned sexual. Heserved 13 monthsof an 18-month sentence for sex crimes charges after reaching a controversial non-prosecution agreement in 2007 with the U.S. attorney's office in Miami.

In 2019, Epsteinwas indictedon charges that he "sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his homes in Manhattan, New York, and Palm Beach, Florida, among other locations," and used cash payments to recruit a "vast network of underage victims," some of whom were as young as 14 years old.

Epstein died in jail while awaiting trial on August 10, 2019. His death wasruled a suicideby hanging by the New York Medical Examiner's Office, and the Justice Department concurred with that finding.

Tartaglione was convicted in 2023 and sentenced in 2024 to four consecutive terms of life imprisonment.  His appeal is currently pending before the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Ex-cellmate says he found suicide note from Jeffrey Epstein

A suicide note purportedly written by the convicted sex offenderJeffrey Epsteinis locked inside the case file of his former cellmate, c...
DOJ seeks pretrial detention of shooting suspect Cole Allen, shares new photos

What's next for correspondents' dinner shooting suspect as he faces attempted assassination charge 07:08

CBS News

The government is asking the court to detain White House Correspondents' Association Dinnershooting suspectCole Allen pending trial, according to court documents filed Wednesday.

D.C. U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro filed amemorandummaking the request and included a new photo of Allen with his weapons that officials say he took shortly before the attack Saturday night.

"At approximately 8:03 p.m., while back inside his hotel room, the defendant used his cellphone to take a photograph of himself in the mirror," the memorandum states, pointing out items including a gun holster, sheathed knife, and ammunition bag in the photo. He wore a black dress shirt, black slacks, and bright red tie.

Abouthalf an hour later, authorities say, the suspectsprinted pastthe magnetometers and fired a shotgun blast beforefalling downand being restrained by officers.

A Justice Department court filing includes images of a selfie Cole Allen allegedly took in his hotel room shortly before the White House Correspondents' Dinner shooting on April 25, 2026. (Evidence markers added by DOJ.) / Credit: U.S. Department of Justice

The memorandum provided more details about Allen's actions in the weeks and days leading up to the dinner, alleging that Allen's attack involved "extensive planning and preparation" dating back to at least April 6, when he searched on his phone for "white house correspondents dinner 2026." Hours later, Allen booked a two-night stay at the Washington Hilton, the memorandum said, and on April 16, Allen again searched for articles on the dinner, including the event's host, schedule and expected attendees.

According to prosecutors, on the day of the dinner, Allen left his hotel room multiple times. Around 6:26 p.m., he allegedly used his phone to check the president's schedule on a site called CivicTracker. At 8:03 p.m., he took the selfie in the mirror, and about 10 minutes later, he visited the CivicTracker webpage again, according to the memorandum. He exited the hotel room around 8:15 p.m.

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Minutes before the alleged attack, prosecutors said, Allen looked at a media outlet's video called "WATCH LIVE: President Trump, first lady en route to White House Correspondents' Dinner" on his phone. He then visited a website with live coverage of President Trump exiting his car for the dinner, followed by a web search for "trump white house correspondents dinner." Around 8:30 p.m., prescheduled emails went to Allen's friends and family with "Apology and Explanation" in the subject line.

"Shortly thereafter, the defendant rushed the screening checkpoint on the Terrace Level of the Washington Hilton with a raised shotgun," wrote the prosecution, discarding a black coat under which he had concealed a 12-gauge pump-action shotgun. He sprinted through a magnetometer and ran toward the stairs to the ballroom, shotgun in his hands.

Prosecutors said the six shots were fired — one by Allen, who allegedly fired his shotgun in the direction of the stairs leading down to the ballroom. Then, a Secret Service officer drew his service weapon and fired five times at Allen. Allen fell, injuring his knee, but he had not been shot. He was restrained by law enforcement and arrested.

"At the time of his arrest, the defendant was in possession of a Mossberg 12-gauge pump action shotgun with one spent cartridge in the barrel and eight unfired cartridges in the magazine tube," the filing said.

Allen wascharged Monday in federal courtwith three counts, including attempting to assassinate the president. The other two charges involved the use and transport of firearms.

The memorandum noted that Allen, if convicted, faces a possible maximum life sentence in prison.

"The defendant's actions were premeditated, violent, and calculated to cause death," the memorandum said. "Considering the relevant statutory factors, there is no condition or combination of conditions that will reasonably assure the safety of other people or the community if the defendant were released from custody. The Court should detain the defendant pending trial."

DOJ seeks pretrial detention of shooting suspect Cole Allen, shares new photos

What's next for correspondents' dinner shooting suspect as he faces attempted assassination charge 07:08 The government i...
The House shredded a combative Hegseth on Iran. A worse fate awaits him in Senate tomorrow

On Wednesday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegsethdelivered a defiant and aggressive testimonybefore the House Armed Services Committee.

The Independent US

While the testimony was billed as being about the Pentagon’s budget, it inevitably became about the War in Iran. During the testimony, Hegseth was sometimes outright belligerent. My colleague Holly Baxtersaid that he sounded increasingly deluded and desperate, hoping to win the support of the audience of one that is Donald Trump.

At one point,he gallingly said that“the biggest adversary we face at this point are the reckless, feckless and defeatist words of congressional Democrats and some Republicans.”

A few days ago, I hid under a table during the White House Correspondents’ Dinner asI saw Hegseth bolt out of the Washington Hiltonafter a shooter allegedly came to try and take out Trump. But here, he showed absolutely zero signs of trying to turn down the tone in the country.

“Choosing to call out Democrats and some Republicans as our greatest threat, amidst all the threats, including an act of war, shows you what a f***ng joke he is,” Rep. Pat Ryan of New York, a West Point graduate, toldThe Independent. “I asked them questions about six Americans that were killed, and he wouldn't even answer in a straightforward way.”

U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth departs after testifying before the House Armed Services Committee April 29, 2026 in the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, DC. Hegseth testified on the Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Request. (Getty)

Even Rep. Jen Kiggans (R-Va.), who represents the Navy-heavy Virginia Beach, grilled Hegseth about the dismissal of the Secretary of the Navy John Phelan.

But if Hegseth had a rough go at it at the House of Representatives, he will have an even tougher time before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday.

There, he will have to face Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.),whom he has tried to punish for a videohe put out with Democratic lawmakers saying U.S. servicemembers have a right to refuse illegal orders.

Members who are not on the committee will also be watching Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), who voted to confirm Hegseth, but has at times become more critical of the Trump administration while avoiding directly criticizing the president.

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“I think that we need details,” Tillis toldThe Independent. We need to know what the strategic objectives are. What does success look like? What is the build-up for the budget request?”

And this is to say nothing of the Republicans who voted against his confirmation: Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. McConnell especially criticized the Pentagon.

This week, the usually taciturn McConnellput out an op-edinThe Washington Postcriticizing the fact that the Pentagon has not spent $400 billion that the Senate set aside for Ukraine.

Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) hit out at the Pentagon for not spending money meant for Ukraine. (Getty Images)

“Trump’s focus on ending the war is noble,” he said. “But the price and stability of peace matter. The Pentagon’s approach of withholding or slow-rolling support to Ukraine is in effect the same strategy President Joe Biden deployed.”

For someone like McConnell, the chairman of the Appropriations Committee’s subcommittee on military spending, this was a damning condemnation. McConnell did not mention Hegset,h but it was a clear message for him to get it together.

The Senate as a whole is more hawkish than the House, so Hegseth might not face as much criticism about the war in Iran itself as about his management of the war. And the Senate does not take kindly to people dictating what it cannot know.

A common trait of the Trump White House has been members of the administration avoiding accountability or congressional oversight and then immediately melting in front of a committee.

Homeland Security Kristi Noem avoided the Senate Judiciary Committee for months, only for Tillis and Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) to eviscerate her. A few days later, she was gone. In February, Attorney General Pam Bondi faced a round of tough questioning about files related to Jeffrey Epstein, giving an equally pugnacious performance. By April, she got the boot.

This isn’t to say that Hegseth will suffer the same fate as the ladies. But as more members lose patience with him and as Republicans want to find someone to blame other than Trump, he might be the next sacrificial lamb.

The House shredded a combative Hegseth on Iran. A worse fate awaits him in Senate tomorrow

On Wednesday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegsethdelivered a defiant and aggressive testimonybefore the House Armed Services Committee. ...
276 arrested in connection with 'scam centers' targeting Americans

A transnational investigation into cryptocurrency "pig-butchering" schemes netted more than 275 arrests, including six people who are now facing charges in San Diego.

USA TODAY

TheDepartment of Justice announced April 29that at least 276 people allegedly connected to cryptocurrency fraud schemes were arrested, and "at least nine scam centers" used to facilitate the operations had been dismantled. The schemes reportedly syphoned millions of dollars from Americans' bank accounts.

The investigation's success, the department said, was thanks to "unprecedented cooperation between the FBI, Dubai Police Department, and Chinese Ministry of Public Security."

“Fraudsters who target Americans from overseas cannot operate with impunity, no matter where in the world they reside,” said Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva of the DOJ’s Criminal Division.

Representations of cryptocurrency bitcoin are seen in this illustration picture created in Paris, France, March 9, 2024.

Americans lost a record $15.9 billion to scams in 2025, FTC says

'Global crime now faces global justice'

Six of the individuals arrested are facing federal fraud and money laundering charges in theSouthern District of California. Four were identified as Thet Min Nyi, 27, of Myanmar; and Indonesian nationals Wiliang Awang, 23; Andreas Chandra, 29; and Lisa Mariam, 29. Two other unidentified individuals currently on the run are also facing charges.

The DOJ noted that the Dubai Police, operating under the United Arab Emirates Ministry of Interior, led the effort to disrupt the scam and were responsible for arresting Thet Min Nyi, Chandra and Mariam. Awang, meanwhile, was apprehended by the Royal Thai Police.

Gen Z wants crypto in their stocking this year, according to a Visa survey.

If convicted, each charge carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and fines between $250,000 and $500,000.

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“These scammers thought they were safe half a world away,” said U.S. Attorney Adam Gordon for the Southern District of California. “But their world has changed. Global crime now faces global justice.”

Binance CEO pardon follows Trump family's growing ties to the cryptocurrency industry

Pig-butchering out of San Diego

The case dates back to 2025, when FBI agents inSan Diegoidentified several companies and individuals allegedly operating cryptocurrency fraud schemes out of various compounds in the city.

According to the indictment, two criminal complaints and other court records, Thet Min Nyi, Chandra, Mariam, Awang and their two fugitive co-conspirators allegedly "managed, worked for, and recruited others to work for" three companies –– Ko Thet Company, Sanduo Group and Giant Company – that operated several different crypto schemes.

Targeting people in both the United States and abroad, the alleged perpetrators engaged in pig-butchering schemes, which involve gaining a victim's trust, generally through an online friendship or romance, before convincing them to invest in a fraudulentcryptocurrencyand stealing their money.

'Fraud is borderless'

Thet Min Nyi and a fugitive co-defendant were indicted by a grand jury in the Southern District of California in March 2026 on wire fraud and money laundering conspiracies. They allegedly played a role in managing and recruiting for the Ko Thet Company, which was also known as "Pixy."

The other four individuals – Awang, Chandra, their fugitive co-defendant and Mariam – were charged with wire fraud conspiracy in two criminal complaints filed in the Southern District of California in April 2026. The four allegedly operated cryptocurrency investment fraud schemes tied to Sanduo Group and Giant Company.

“The charges and arrests announced today reflect an international consensus that scam centers are unwelcome everywhere and must be rooted out," said Duva. "In contemporary society, fraud is borderless, and law enforcement activity to combat it and eliminate it is as well.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:At least 276 arrested in connection with 'scam centers,' DOJ says

276 arrested in connection with 'scam centers' targeting Americans

A transnational investigation into cryptocurrency "pig-butchering" schemes netted more than 275 arrests, including six people...

 

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