Trump's 'weaponization' chief accuses D.C. disciplinary counsel investigating him of weaponizationNew Foto - Trump's 'weaponization' chief accuses D.C. disciplinary counsel investigating him of weaponization

WASHINGTON — The incoming director of the Justice Department's "Weaponization Working Group" revealed Wednesday he was under investigation by D.C.'s Office of Disciplinary Counsel, accusing the official in charge of investigating bar complaints of "weaponizing" his role, according to an letter viewed by NBC News. Outgoing Interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Ed Martin, in a going-away email to his staff, complained about the actions of Disciplinary Counsel Hamilton P. "Phil" Fox III, who serves as chief prosecutor for disciplinary matters for attorneys who are members of the D.C. Bar. "Please know that I will continue to fight against the systemic abuse of our prosecutors by [Public Defender Service], the Judges, and especially the DC Disciplinary Counsel," Martin wrote in the email to staff. "It is an outrage how they treat us and I will continue the fight against the weaponization of our law licenses against us. Please see the attached — I am taking on Mr. Fox head on. His conduct is personally insulting and professionally unacceptable." Several outside organizations and members of Congress have sought investigations into Martin over his actions while he was U.S. attorney, and Fox had previously declined to take further steps on at least one of the requests. Most requests sent to Fox's office are turned away, but Martin's letter indicted that at least one probe was moving forward, which has been given a disciplinary docket number: 2025-D047. The investigation is in a non-public stage, and will only become a matter of public record if the office makes a decision to move forward with a disciplinary case against Martin. Fox declined to comment. News of the investigation wasfirst reported by Reuters. Martin's goodbye email was accompanied by a copy of a letter to Judge Anna Blackburne-Rigsby of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, in which he complains that Fox sent "signature required paid postage" to his home and office which "prompted questions from my family and work colleagues who had to sign." Martin called it an "annoyance" and saying it "pushed the envelope of confidentiality." He also writes that Fox sent the letter to the intake email box for the U.S Attorney's Office's Civil Division. "To be clear, Mr. Fox is weaponizing his role, responsibilities, and his office against me and this office. He is using a recent bar complaint as his weapon," Martin wrote in the letter. "I ask that you not only suspend Mr. Fox immediately to investigate his conduct, but also to dismiss this case against me because of his prejudicial conduct." The Justice Department's Weaponization Working Group, of which Martin is taking charge,was formedby Attorney General Pam Bondi in response to an executive order from President Donald Trump and is charged with looking into several issues, including the work of former Special Counsel Jack Smith and the Justice Department's handling of the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol. Martin's letter came the same day that former Fox News host Jeanine Pirro took over the role of interim U.S. attorney, after the Senate didn't move forward with confirming Martin to serve on a permanent basis. In a press conference on Tuesday, Martin said that he planned to"shame" individuals he said "did some really bad things to the American people"even if the Justice Department did not pursue criminal charges. In an interview with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson that posted on Wednesday, Martin said that he doesn't think that prosecuting individuals for criminal wrongdoing is enough, continuing to suggest that he'll use the bully pulpit of the Justice Department to communicate information about uncharged parties. "One of the reasons I say information is so key, you can't, we can't win the Article III battle fast enough," Martin said, referring to courts. "You can't win it fast enough to get the progress we need." "So you're in the courts fighting to get the truth out, fighting to make these things, prosecutions and all, but they take a longer time than just getting the word out, right, getting the information out," Martin said. "I feel like it's a different moment in history."

Trump's 'weaponization' chief accuses D.C. disciplinary counsel investigating him of weaponization

Trump's 'weaponization' chief accuses D.C. disciplinary counsel investigating him of weaponization WASHINGTON — The incoming dir...
How Air Force One stacks up to the Qatari 747, Trump's coveted 'palace in the sky'New Foto - How Air Force One stacks up to the Qatari 747, Trump's coveted 'palace in the sky'

WASHINGTON ―President Donald Trumpsays Air Force Oneisn't up to snuff. When he lands and looks over at the planes of the leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates sitting on the tarmac, he says his presidential ride doesn't compare. "This is like a totally different plane," Trump told Fox News commentator Sean Hannity this week aboard Air Force One duringhis trip to the Middle East. "It's much smaller. It's less impressive." Yet as Trumpplans to accept Boeing 747-8, oftendubbed a "palace in the sky,"from Qatar's royal family ‒ a $400 million foreign gift that would be the largest ever to a U.S. president ‒ the exterior differences might not jump off the page for the casual flyer. Plane negotiations:Trump in talks to accept luxury jet from Qatar's royal family The Qatari plane stretches 18 feet 4 incheslonger than Air Force One, can carry more weight and fly slightly faster and farther. It's also 22 years newer than Air Force One, built in 1990. Both planes hold about the same number of passengers and have the same height. But the Qatari plane separates itself most visibly with its lavish inside amenities ‒ creamy white and tan leather furnishings, rugs and artwork designed by the famed French interior design firm Cabinet Alberto Pinto,according to Bloomberg. Unable to view our graphics?Click here to see them. Trump has portrayed the jet as an aging relic and the Qatari plane as a badly needed upgrade. "We're the United States of America," Trump said. "I believe that we should have the most impressive plane." But if converted to Air Force One, the Qatari plane's inside would have to be entirely stripped, scrubbed for surveillance technology for security reasons and effectively rebuilt, Republicans lawmakers on committees that oversee the nation's armed services and intelligence agenciestold the Wall Street Journal. Trump has complained that Boeing has been too slow to complete a new Air Force One after his first administration in 2018 awarded the company a $3.9 billion contract to build two new Air Force One jets.CNN reportedthe new planes could be delivered by 2027 ‒ two years earlier than the most recently predicted date and before Trump's second term ends. (The Air Force operates a second Air Force One jet, also a Boeing 747-200B series aircraft, deployed in 1991.) More:Fighter jets, chandeliers, a Cybertruck: See the pomp of Trump's Middle East visit Trump's idea is for the Qatari plane to serve as the temporary Air Force One until Boeing finishes building the new versions. The plane would then go to his future presidential library. Democrats and other critics of the move argue accepting the plane could violate the Constitution's Emoluments Clause, which bars any U.S. official from accepting "any present" of "any kind whatsoever, from any King, Prince, or foreign state." The White House has countered that the plane is agift to the U.S. Air Force, not Trump personally. The White House has not released information about the Qatari plane that Trump covets. Butthe news publication Semafor trackedthe tail number of the plane when it was parked at Palm Beach International Airport in South Florida this summer. The number matches a Boeing serial number of a plane detailed in a 16-page "aircraft specification summary" by the Swiss firm AMAC Aerospace It's unclear whether the Qatari plane hasundertaken accommodationssince the summary was posted in 2023. Here is a comparisons of the Qatari plane versus Air Force One based on publicly available information: Air Force One is a Boeing 747-200B, which has increased fuel capacity and more powerful engines than the standard 747-200. Boeing first started serving the model in 1972. Air Force One has upgrades from a standard 747-200B that include special electronic and communications equipment, a self-contained baggage loader, front and aft air-stairs and the capability for in-flight refueling. The Qatari plane is a Boeing 747-8, a widebody aircraft with lengthened fuselage and redesigned wings,according to Boeing. The model went onto the market in 2011. The current Air Force One plane was completed in 1990 and has served six presidents: George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Trump, both in his first and second non-consecutive terms. The Qatari royal family purchased the Boeing 747-B in 2012, the same year it was built. The plane's interior was refurbished and itbegan service in 2015. In addition to being longer and a bit taller, the 747-B owned by Qatar also has a wider wing span: 224 feet, 5 inches, compared to Air Force One's 195, 8 inches. The Qatari 747-8 can also fly farther without refueling. Air Force One can fly about 7,751 miles without needing to refuel. That's equivalent to aflight west from Washington D.C. to Tokyo. The 747-B has a maximum take-off weight of 987,000 pounds, compared to 833,000 pounds for Air Force One. More:'This is what they call perfecto': Gulf monarchies bring A-game to Trump charm offensive Air Force One has about 4,000 square feet of interior floor space,according to information from Boeingand the U.S. Force. That includes an executive suite with quarters for both the president and first lady (equipped with a dressing room, lavatory and shower), a conference and dining room, an office area for senior staff members, an area that can convert into a medical facility, as well as sitting areas for the presidential staff and Secret Service, Air Force crews and traveling members of the press. Air Force One also contains two galleys that can provide 100 meals at one sitting, advanced multi-frequency radios for air-to-air, ground and satellite communications and state-of-the-art navigation, electronic and communications equipment. The plane has six passenger lavatories. The interior of the Qatari plane has a more modern design with chic cream white couches, seats and rugs, photos of the plane show. Artwork from the late American sculptor Alexander Calder is featured throughout,according to Bloomberg, along with custom-made Tai Ping rugs, sycamore and wacapou wood fixtures. The layout includes a master bedroom, guest bedroom, a private hallway for the executive residence, an upper deck lounge area with a long leather sofa facing a large flat screen television, additional loung areas with oversized leather seats, a private office and several galleries. Amenities include electric window shades, water systems that allow hot and cold water for each sink and shower, a digital entertainment and game system, along with sophisticated sound, television and broadband internet systems. The plane has nine lavatories for passengers in addition to one lavatory in the bedroom suite and another in the guest bedroom. This story was updated to add new information. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Air Force One vs the Qatari 747: How they compare

How Air Force One stacks up to the Qatari 747, Trump's coveted 'palace in the sky'

How Air Force One stacks up to the Qatari 747, Trump's coveted 'palace in the sky' WASHINGTON ―President Donald Trumpsays Air Fo...
Jeanine Pirro sworn in as DC's top federal prosecutorNew Foto - Jeanine Pirro sworn in as DC's top federal prosecutor

The US attorney's office in Washington, DC, is hoping for a new era of relative calm as the top federal prosecutor in the nation's capital switches from one outspoken, controversial ally of the president to another. Former Fox News host andnewly tapped interim US Attorney Jeanine Pirrotook her oath of office on Wednesday and now leads one of the most powerful federal prosecution offices in the country. Pirro takes on a position that is under the microscope of Democrats, Republicans, and the Trump administration after Ed Martin, her predecessor, had his nomination withdrawn as it faltered on Capitol Hill over hispraise of an alleged Nazi sympathizer, hisrefusal to saythere was violence at the US Capitol riot and his comments denigrating police officers who defended the building that day. Employees at the US attorney's office are hoping that, despite her public persona as a bellicose cable news host, Pirro will bring a more stable leadership presence to the position responsible for running federal criminal investigations in DC. Some DC prosecutors told CNN that under Martin, managing the public comments by the interim US attorney with continuing their work without interruption felt impossible. Some joked that they hope Pirro will focus on TV appearances to allow prosecutors to litigate cases without distractions. "Hopefully Thursday will be better than the past four months," one official inside the office quipped of Pirro's first full day in the job. But it's not yet clear how Pirro, a former judge and district attorney for Westchester County in New York, will handle the new role. She has not held a position in the justice system since 2005, when she left the district attorney's office and began her career on television, and, as a longtime friend and staunch supporter of Trump, some prosecutors fear that she will continue in Martin's footsteps. "We're swapping a man for a woman, nothing more," one person said. "The rest is the same." While Republican opposition to his nomination may have doomed his prospects of running the DC US attorney's office, Martin is staying in a leadership role at DOJ and his attention-grabbing approach to justice will stay in the limelight. Martin, whose highly public and abrasive strategy drew national criticisms but endeared the president to him, plans to continue his path of aggressively exacting revenge on behalf of the Trump administration in his new role at the DOJ atop theWeaponization Working Group. In a news conference marking his final appearance at the US attorney's office on Tuesday, Martin said that the group, which was established on Bondi's first day to review law enforcement actions enacted under the Biden administration for any examples of "politicized justice," would be taking a more public-facing approach. Martin said that the "starting point" for their work would include probes into the work of special counsel Jack Smith and New York Attorney General Letitia James, how the sweeping January 6-related prosecutions unfolded, and whether the Biden administration was "targeting Catholics." And even if he can't find legal backing to bring charges, Martin said, he hopes to publicly call them out. "There are some really bad actors, some people that did some really bad things to the American people, and if they can be charged, we'll charge them," Martin said. But if they can't be charged, "we will name them… there should be people that are shamed. And that's a fact, that's the way things work," Martin continued, suggesting that is how he sees his role leading the weaponization group. Martin's comments have caught the attention of lawyers representing former special counsel prosecutor Jay Bratt and helped underscore why he opted to invoke his Fifth Amendment rights when answering questions from the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday. CNN's Paula Reid contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Jeanine Pirro sworn in as DC’s top federal prosecutor

Jeanine Pirro sworn in as DC's top federal prosecutor The US attorney's office in Washington, DC, is hoping for a new era of relativ...
Turkey to discuss roadmap with U.S., Syria after U.S. lifted Syrian sanctionsNew Foto - Turkey to discuss roadmap with U.S., Syria after U.S. lifted Syrian sanctions

ANTALYA, Turkey (Reuters) - Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said on Thursday he will discuss the U.S. decision to lift sanctions on Syria and the roadmap ahead in a meeting with his U.S. and Syrian counterparts later in the day. Fidan was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of an informal NATO foreign ministers' meeting in Antalya, Turkey, where he later planned to meet U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shibani. U.S. President Donald Trump made the surprise announcement on Syrian sanctions this week. (Reporting by Sabine Siebold and Tuvan Gumrukcu; Writing by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Daren Butler)

Turkey to discuss roadmap with U.S., Syria after U.S. lifted Syrian sanctions

Turkey to discuss roadmap with U.S., Syria after U.S. lifted Syrian sanctions ANTALYA, Turkey (Reuters) - Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fid...
China blasts new US rule banning use of Huawei's Ascend advanced computer chipsNew Foto - China blasts new US rule banning use of Huawei's Ascend advanced computer chips

Chinahas blasted a new U.S. rule against use of Ascend computer chips made by Huawei Technologies anywhere in the world, chafing Thursday against the limitations of a temporarytruce in the trade warbetween the two biggest economies. Beijing moved ahead, however, with fulfilling its promise to lift retaliatory measures it imposed after U.S.President Donald Trumpescalated his trade war,raisingtariffson Chinese products to as high as 145%. One key action was to remove a ban on exports to the United States of minerals known as rare earths that are used in many high-tech products. Despite the deal struck last weekend in Geneva,frictions remain. Earlier this week, the U.S. Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security issuedguidancesaying that Huawei's Ascend semiconductors are subject to U.S. export controls, on the basis that they are thought to employ U.S. technology. "These chips were likely developed or produced in violation of U.S. export controls," it said in a statement on its website, adding that "the use of such PRC advanced computing ICs risks violating U.S. export controls and may subject companies to BIS enforcement action." China's Commerce Ministry responded that the move was "not conducive to long-term, mutually beneficial, and sustainable cooperation and development between the two countries. The Chinese side urges the U.S. side to immediately correct its erroneous practices," said ministry spokesperson He Yongqian. Huawei's Ascend chip is central to China's effort to build its own capacity to build leading edge computer chips and other technologies. Analysts say use of the chip in China's DeepSeekartificial intelligenceeffort reflects a potential challenge for Nvidia in the global AI market. He also lashed out against U.S. tariffs on imports of Chinese steel and aluminum, which have not gotten a reprieve after Beijing and Washington agreed to their pause in many tariff increases. She said the U.S. should give up its use of Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which gives the president power to impose tariffs on other countries on national security grounds. In February, Trump drew on that authority to restore 25% tariffs onsteel and aluminumthat he had imposed during his first term in office. Speaking at a weekly ministry briefing, He urged the US to end the higher tariffs "as soon as possible." The 30% levy that America is now imposing on Chinese goods includes an existing 20% tariff intended to pressure China into doing more to prevent thethe synthetic opioid fentanylfrom entering the United States. It also includes the same 10% "baseline'' tariff Trump has slapped on imports from most of the world's countries. The 30% tax comes on top of other levies on China, including some left over from Trump's first term and kept by former President Joe Biden. China is imposing a 10% tariff on U.S. products during the 90-day negotiating period.

China blasts new US rule banning use of Huawei's Ascend advanced computer chips

China blasts new US rule banning use of Huawei's Ascend advanced computer chips Chinahas blasted a new U.S. rule against use of Ascend c...

 

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