Noem: Anarchists Put $10K Bounty on Killing ICE Officers

Anti-American leftist anarchists are doxing, stalking, and targeting federal agents in coordinated plots across major U.S. cities, with some groups offering thousands of dollars to kidnap or kill them, according to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

“So our intelligence indicates that these people are organized,” Noem warned in a Sunday morning TV interview. “They’re getting more and more people on their team, as far as attacking officers, and they’re making plans to ambush them and to kill them.

h/t XC

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America has an army of helpers in its drive to mass deport illegal migrants

British Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood recently met with US secretary of homeland security Kristi Noem, a staunch ally of President Trump. By most accounts, the meeting went surprisingly well, given their political differences, as they discussed their common goal of trying to curb illegal immigration.

Mahmood, like Noem, faces significant opposition from progressive judges to deporting illegal immigrants. In the UK, the courts recently blocked a migrant from being deported under the new “one in, one out” agreement with France, marking another instance of judicial obstruction of efforts to control Britain’s borders.

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ICE Tops 1000 Arrests in Chicago as SCOTUS Gives Immigration Enforcement Win

The U.S. Supreme Court gave the Trump administration a win against mass amnesty as ICE Chicago topped more than 1000 arrests of illegal aliens in one of the most challenging and crime-infested sanctuary cities in America.

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Illegal migrant school chief’s sordid past revealed: Sex, lies and DEI payouts

The school district superintendent arrested by ICE this week lied about attending MIT and was the subject of two sex discrimination lawsuits, The Post has learned.

Snappy-dresser Ian Andre Roberts, 51, was fired by Des Moines Public Schools after it emerged he was working illegally and had been avoiding a deportation order.

Roberts spent over twenty years bouncing around the nation’s education system, holding top posts from coast-to-coast, but also proved controversial.

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Judge denies Kilmar Ábrego García’s bid for asylum in the US

An immigration judge in Baltimore has denied Kilmar Ábrego García’s bid for asylum on Thursday, but he has 30 days to appeal.

Ábrego’s case has drawn national attention since the 30-year-old was wrongfully deported by the Trump administration to El Salvador in March. The Salvadorian national has an American wife and children and has lived in Maryland for years, but he originally immigrated to the US illegally as a teenager.

Following widespread pressure, the Trump administration returned him to the US in June. Upon his return, however, he immediately faced criminal charges related to human smuggling, allegations that his lawyers have rejected.

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Migrant Crime: “Numbers and Facts on Migration Don’t Lie”—German Police Union Leader Manuel Ostermann

“It is already statistically proven that this wave of migration has fuelled crime. To deny that would be irresponsible.”

Manuel Ostermann serves as the First Deputy Federal Chairman of the DPolG Federal Police Union in Germany. He is also the domestic policy spokesperson for the Junge Union, the governing CDU/CSU alliance’s youth organisation in the state of North Rhine–Westphalia, and an expert on internal security and policing. We spoke with him last week in the Hungarian city of Szeged, on the sidelines of a conference on the 10th Anniversary of the European Migration Crisis organised by the Mathias Corvinus Collegium (MCC) and the Migration Research Institute (MRI).

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‘So consequential’: Ottawa faces lawsuit over benefit shoppers rights to access immigration lawyers

‘So consequential’: Ottawa faces lawsuit over newcomers’ rights to access immigration lawyers

A lawyers’ group says it is suing the federal government in a bid to boost legal protections for newcomers in “high-stakes” immigration and refugee cases.

The Canadian Immigration Lawyers Association (CILA) wants to force three federal departments to recognize the right for newcomers to have access to their lawyers in all stages of the visa application process. The non-profit organization named Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, and Employment and Social Development Canada as defendants in Federal Court documents.

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Refugees in Four-Star Hotels as Germany’s Bill Hits €193 Million

Germany’s largest cities are shelling out hundreds of millions of euros on housing thousands of refugees in hotels, as local authorities struggle to cope with a lack of social housing and emergency shelters. Despite a decline in the overall number of asylum applications, the inflow of Ukrainian refugees entitled to initial accommodation has left city administrations with little choice but to turn to the private sector.

According to Bild, Germany’s ten largest cities—plus Essen, Dresden, Potsdam, Hanover, Chemnitz, and Rostock—reported that 11,809 refugees were living in hotels and guesthouses at the end of June. The cost in the first half of 2025 alone amounted to more than €193 million.

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Why Portland’s hipsters may secretly approve the National Guard

Donald Trump’s latest pledge to send the National Guard into Portland feels less like a response to a crisis and more like an unwanted sequel. The original deployment occurred in the summer of 2020, amid months of protests and recurring clashes near courthouses and police stations, some of which turned violent. The city saw a deadly incident that August when Michael Reinoehl, a self-proclaimed anti-fascist, shot and killed Aaron “Jay” Danielson, a member of the far-Right group Patriot Prayer. Reinoehl was subsequently killed by a US Marshals task force.

This time, the backdrop is far quieter: protests over ICE raids in 2025 are real but a fraction of the intensity of the George Floyd era. Plus, there are signs that Portland, like other blue cities, has quietly begun its own course correction.

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Man arrested after blaze at asylum hotel

A 64-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life after a fire at a London hotel housing asylum seekers.

The blaze at the Thistle City Barbican in Dingley Road, Islington, is being treated as a hate crime by investigating officers and has been condemned as a “despicable and cowardly attack”.

It happened at about 22:50 BST on Wednesday, according to the Metropolitan Police.

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Two Ontario diploma mills face deep cuts as foreign student scam hit by enrolment cap

Two Ontario colleges face deep cuts as foreign student cap shrinks enrolment, reports show

Two Ontario colleges are facing significant financial hardship if they do not slash costs to cope with weaker foreign student enrolment, according to reports prepared for the Ontario government.

Loyalist College in Belleville and Northern College in Timmins could suffer revenue declines of approximately 60 per cent and 35 per cent, respectively, between 2025 and 2030, according to the reports, which were authored by consulting companies KPMG and Deloitte and obtained by The Globe and Mail.

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Schoolgirl assaulted by Epping migrant now feels ‘vulnerable’ in skirt

A schoolgirl who was sexually assaulted by an Ethiopian asylum seeker near a migrant hotel in Essex has said she feels “vulnerable wearing a skirt” since the attack.

The unnamed 14-year-old victim said she felt forced to check over her shoulder whenever she went out with friends.

The migrant, Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu, 38, was jailed for 12 months on Tuesday after assaulting the girl and a woman in Epping. The sentence means he is automatically eligible for deportation.

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California bans most law enforcement including ICE from wearing masks

California’s governor has signed a bill to ban local and federal law enforcement officers, including with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), from wearing face masks while on duty.

The ban, which comes into effect on 1 January 2026, is part of a series of bills that aims to protect residents from what Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom has called “secret police” roaming the streets.

US Attorney Bill Essayli, a Trump appointee, said California “has no jurisdiction over the federal government”, adding the law has “no effect on our operations” and agents “will continue to protect their identities”.

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That’s A Good Thing: Number of asylum seekers turned back by Canada grows despite U.S. threat of third-country deportation

Canada – Camp of The Saints Doormat

Canada’s government is sending more asylum-seekers hoping to file claims in Canada back to the U.S. under a bilateral pact, even as the U.S. says it may deport them to third countries.

Some of the people Canada is turning back should be eligible to file refugee claims in Canada, lawyers say, under exemptions to the Safe Third Country Agreement. The agreement broadly requires asylum-seekers at the Canada-U.S. border to be sent back to the first of the two countries they entered but allows some people – for example those with close family in Canada or stateless persons – to file claims.

Not our problem.

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Dutch police clash with anti-immigration protesters

Dutch police used tear gas and water cannon to disperse violent anti-immigration protesters in The Hague on Saturday.

Thirty people were arrested and two officers injured as large groups of people clashed with police, with some throwing rocks and bottles.

Around 1,500 people blocked a highway crossing the city, while a police car was set on fire, the Netherlands news agency ANP reported, citing police figures.

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