šŸ”µ ICE Attacked

Good morning. It’s Saturday, June 7.

Protesters clashed with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and FBI agents as multiple raids played out in Los Angeles on Friday, and local authorities appeared to side mainly with the illegal aliens.

The raids were undertaken in several locations — including two Home Depot stores and the headquarters of Ambient Apparel in the fashion district — ranging from downtown Los Angeles to Westlake, Cypress Park, and the area known as Skid Row.

As the raids began, Mayor Karen Bass (D-LA) spoke out, condemning the federal agents for enforcing federal immigration laws and issuing a statement via X: ā€œThis morning, we received reports of federal immigration enforcement actions in multiple locations in Los Angeles. As mayor of a proud city of immigrants, who contribute to our city in so many ways, I am deeply angered by what has taken place.ā€

 
 

Elon Musk has taken down his tweet claiming President Trump was implicated in the still-unreleased ā€œ[Jeffrey] Epstein filesā€ in a first sign of de-escalation since the titanic blow-up between the powerful men this week.

ā€œTime to drop the really big bomb,ā€ Musk, 53, had posted Thursday on X to his more than 220 million followers after a multi-day tirade against the president’s spending bill working its way through Congress.

ā€œ@realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files.That is the real reason they have not been made public,ā€ he alleged. ā€œHave a nice day, DJT!ā€

A federal judge who has ruled twice to halt executive actions by President Donald Trump previously gave about $500,000 in campaign contributions to Democrats.

The judge, U.S. District Judge John McConnell of the District of Rhode Island, will also preside over yet another case involving Trump. All three cases involve federal funding.

In one case, McConnell sided with a coalition of Democrat state attorneys general to stop a federal funding freeze. In another, he sided with the state of Rhode Island regarding federal funding cuts.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and two other Trump administration officials will meet with their Chinese counterparts in London on Monday for renewed trade talks, President Donald Trump said.

Bessent, who has been leading the administration’s efforts to craft a deal with Beijing, will be joined by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, Trump said.

ā€œThe meeting should go very well,ā€ the president wrote on Truth Social on Friday afternoon. ā€œThank you for your attention to this matter!ā€

The serial transit offender with about 230 total arrests who cops slammed as a candidate for the subway crime ā€œHall of Fameā€ is in trouble again as he racked up four more busts over the past month before being dumped back onto the street, law enforcement sources said.

Michael Wilson, 37 – who sources say committed 90 percent of his crimes in the subway system – was nabbed for the 25th time this year on Tuesday for allegedly riding between cars on a train passing through the 42nd Street-Times Square station, according to the sources.

He then lied about his personal info to arresting officers, according to the sources.

A girls’ high school softball team in Minnesota won its first-ever state championship on Friday thanks to the lights-out pitching of a boy who identifies as a girl.

The Champlin Park Rebels took down the Bloomington Jefferson Jaguars 6-0 in the 4A title game, riding the arm of Marissa Rothenberger, a boy, who pitched the entire game, giving up just two hits to Bloomington Jefferson. In the Rebels’ three-game tournament title run, Rothenberger pitched all 21 innings for the team, allowing just two runs.

Champlin Park advanced to the state championship in a comeback win against White Bear Lake on Wednesday, with Rothenberger, a junior, hitting two huge doubles that sparked a rally for the Rebels, Outkick reported. According to the outlet, two fathers of girls on White Bear Lake ā€œexpressed deep frustration with the system that allowed their daughters to compete against a male athlete.ā€

D-Day was the name given to the June 6, 1944, invasion of the beaches at Normandy in northern France by troops from the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and other countries during World War II.

France at the time was occupied by the armies of Nazi Germany, and the amphibious assault—codenamed Operation Overlord—landed some 156,000 Allied soldiers on the beaches of Normandy by the end of the day.

Despite their success, some 4,000 Allied troops were killed by German soldiers defending the beaches. At the time, the D-Day invasion was the largest naval, air and land operation in history, and within a few days about 326,000 troops, more than 50,000 vehicles and some 100,000 tons of equipment had landed. By August 1944, all of northern France had been liberated, and in spring of 1945 the Allies had defeated the Germans. Historians often refer to D-Day as the beginning of the end of World War II.

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