Monday, February 2, 2026

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Elon Musk, X Settle Lawsuit with Former Twitter Employees.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: Elon Musk and his social media platform X (formerly Twitter) have reached a tentative settlement with former employees who sued for $500 million in severance pay.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Elon Musk, X (formerly Twitter), and former employees led by Courtney McMillian.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The settlement was reported on Wednesday in a court filing in San Francisco.

💬KEY QUOTE: “The parties have reached a settlement agreement in principle and began negotiating the terms of a long form settlement agreement,” according to court documents.

🎯IMPACT: The settlement, once finalized, could resolve disputes over severance pay for approximately 6,000 former employees.

IN FULL

Elon Musk and his social media platform X (formerly Twitter) have tentatively settled a lawsuit with former employees seeking $500 million in severance payments. On Wednesday, a court filing showed that both sides asked a San Francisco U.S. appeals court to postpone an upcoming hearing to finalize the settlement documents.

The lawsuit, spearheaded by ex-Twitter employee Courtney McMillian, alleges that around 6,000 workers were denied benefits outlined in the company’s severance plan. Employees claimed the company offered some of them only one month’s severance pay at most, while others received none, despite promises of up to six months’ salary.

According to court filings, “the parties have reached a settlement agreement in principle and began negotiating the terms of a long form settlement agreement.” The settlement’s specifics remain undisclosed and await court approval.

The layoffs at Twitter followed Musk’s 2022 acquisition of the company, part of aggressive cost-cutting that slashed over half the workforce. This move preceded a broader tech industry trend, with companies like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft also cutting thousands of jobs over the following years.

Musk is known for using significant workforce reductions to lower costs. He attempted similar reforms to the federal workforce at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) during the early months of the Trump administration, albeit with limited success.

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More Minnesota Church Invaders Arrested Following Don Lemon Indictment.

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WHAT HAPPENED: Attorney General Pam Bondi announced the arrest of two more suspects linked to a protest at a Minnesota church, following a federal indictment.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Ian Davis Austin, Jerome Deangelo Richardson, journalist Don Lemon, and others named in the indictment.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The arrests followed a January 18 protest at Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota.

💬KEY QUOTE: “If you riot in a place of worship, we WILL find you,” Bondi said.

🎯IMPACT: Austin and Richardson are among nine suspects charged in a federal indictment alleging a conspiracy to violate religious freedom at a place of worship, as well as injuring, intimidating, and interfering with the free exercise of religion.

IN FULL

Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Monday the arrests of Ian Davis Austin and Jerome Deangelo Richardson in connection with a January 18 storming of the Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, by anti-ICE activists and Don Lemon, bringing renewed attention to a federal investigation into the disruption of a worship service in a coordinated attack on the church.

Austin and Richardson are among nine suspects charged in a federal indictment alleging a conspiracy to violate religious freedom at a place of worship, as well as injuring, intimidating, and interfering with the free exercise of religion. The protest targeted the church’s pastor over alleged ties to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and took place during a live church service.

According to federal authorities, demonstrators stormed the sanctuary, chanted slogans opposing ICE, and interrupted worship, causing alarm among congregants. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) characterized the incident as a “coordinated attack on the church,” citing the organized nature of the protest and the timing during religious services.

Bondi warned in a social media post, “If you riot in a place of worship, we WILL find you.” Prosecutors have argued that the actions inside the church went beyond protected protest activity and crossed into criminal interference with religious worship. Authorities allege that some participants coordinated travel, livestreaming, and on-site disruptions to maximize attention during the service.

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FACT CHECK: Epstein Email Claiming Trump Hates Black Women, Calls them ‘Boogers’ Appears FAKE.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: A supposed email among newly-released Jeffrey Epstein-related documents, suggesting President Donald J. Trump dislikes black women, appears to be fake.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Jeffrey Epstein, the “Groyper” movement, the International Business Times, and President Trump.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The alleged email began to be circulated on February 1, but has now been deleted.

💬KEY QUOTE: “Trump will be there, [he] doesn’t like black girls, calls them ‘boogers’, won’t go [with them] in 10 feet,” read the alleged, seemingly fabricated email.

🎯IMPACT: A search of the Justice Department’s Epstein Library fails to turn up any sign of the email, and the AF Post account on X (formerly Twitter), which originally shared it, has since deleted it.

IN FULL

A supposed email from Jeffrey Epstein suggesting President Donald J. Trump dislikes black women, shared on X (formerly Twitter) by AF Post and reported by the International Business Times—despite the fact that it had not authenticated it—appears to be fraudulent.

A screenshot of the supposed email shared by AF Post, associated with Nick Fuentes’s anti-Trump Groyper movement and founded by former drug addict Aidan Thompson, shows an unidentified person emailing Epstein to say they planned to bring at least two women to an event, writing, “They’re up for anything, you’ll love them.”

“Not a good idea,” Epstein replies, adding, “Trump will be there, [he] doesn’t like black girls, calls them ‘boogers’, won’t go [within] in 10 feet.” AF Post shared the alleged email alongside a picture of Trump with Nicki Minaj, a black rapper and supporter, and it was subsequently reshared by many other accounts.

Crucially, however, the email appears to be a fabrication. The International Business Times, choosing to cover the email despite not having verified it, conceded five paragraphs into its report: “One should note, however, that the post was unverified and the document shared hasn’t been authenticated. It remains unconfirmed if they are among the official documents released by the Department of Justice as part of the Epstein files.”

A search of the Epstein Library made available online by the Department of Justice (DOJ) fails to turn up any sign of the email. Importantly, AF Post has deleted the post sharing it, suggesting they no longer believe it is genuine—although they have not issued a correction, and it can still be seen embedded in the IB Times report, which remains live as of the time of publication.

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Appeals Court Dismisses Complaint Against Anti-Trump Obama Judge.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: A federal appeals court judge dismissed a judicial misconduct complaint filed by the Justice Department against anti-Trump U.S. District Judge James Boasberg.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Judge James Boasberg, Judge Jeffrey Sutton, the Justice Department, Chad Mizelle, and President Donald J. Trump.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The complaint was filed in July 2025, and the dismissal occurred in December 2025, with proceedings involving the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals.

💬KEY QUOTE: “A repetition of uncorroborated statements rarely supplies a basis for a valid misconduct complaint.” – Judge Jeffrey Sutton in his dismissal order.

🎯IMPACT: The dismissal highlights the ongoing tensions between Judge Boasberg and the Trump Administration over issues from immigration to former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigations of President Trump.

IN FULL

A judicial misconduct complaint against U.S. District Judge James Boasberg has been dismissed by Judge Jeffrey Sutton of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, who concluded that the Justice Department (DOJ) failed to provide evidence to support its allegations. The complaint was filed by Chad Mizelle, a former senior Justice Department official, and accused Boasberg of making improper remarks about the Trump administration during a closed-door meeting of the Judicial Conference. According to the complaint, Boasberg suggested that the administration might ignore federal court rulings and trigger a constitutional crisis.

Judge Sutton said the allegation rested on unsupported claims rather than verified evidence. “In the absence of the attachment, the complaint offers no source for what, if anything, the subject judge said,” Sutton wrote. He also rejected reliance on media commentary cited in the filing, stating that “a repetition of uncorroborated statements rarely supplies a basis for a valid misconduct complaint.”

The complaint referenced a Fox News clip discussing the alleged remarks, but Sutton said it did not independently substantiate the claim. He concluded that the materials provided were insufficient to establish judicial misconduct under governing standards.

Boasberg, the chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, appointed by President Barack Obama, has been a frequent target of criticism from President Donald J. Trump and Republican lawmakers for his aggressive rulings against the administration. He has presided over multiple high-profile cases, most notably challenges to the administration’s use of the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelan migrants. In that litigation, Boasberg temporarily blocked deportation flights and claimed to have found probable cause to consider holding government officials in contempt for failing to comply with his orders.

An appeals court subsequently set aside Boasberg’s contempt ruling, a decision welcomed by the administration and its allies. Nevertheless, Boasberg has continued to warn that contempt proceedings could be revived if his partisan orders are disregarded, fueling tensions between the judiciary and the executive branch.

Some Republican lawmakers have moved impeachment proceedings against Boasberg, citing his handling of immigration cases and his role in matters connected to former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s “Arctic Frost” investigation targeting President Trump and his allies. Critics have accused Boasberg of judicial overreach and bias, allegations the Obama judge has not publicly addressed.

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ProPublica Doxxes Agents Who Shot Alex Pretti – They’re Both Hispanic.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: ProPublica doxxed the names of two federal immigration agents involved in the fatal shooting of Minneapolis agitator Alex Pretti, revealing both are Hispanic men.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Border Patrol agent Jesus Ochoa, 43, and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer Raymundo Gutierrez, 35, were identified as the agents. Pretti, a 37-year-old male nurse, was the shot agitator.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The shooting occurred on January 24 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

💬KEY QUOTE: “[S]ecrecy, in our view, deprives the public of the most fundamental tool for accountability,” claimed ProPublica’s editors.

🎯IMPACT: The Department of Justice (DOJ) has confirmed that its Civil Rights Division is reviewing the Pretti case.

IN FULL

ProPublica has doxxed two Hispanic men, Border Patrol agent Jesus Ochoa and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer Raymundo Gutierrez, as the two federal agents involved in the fatal shooting of anti-ICE agitator Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The agents, both originally from South Texas, were participating in Operation Metro Surge, a major immigration enforcement initiative that began in December.

Following the shooting, both were placed on administrative leave. In explaining their decision to expose the men’s names, potentially exposing them and their families to far-left or immigrant-linked violence, despite the fact they have not been charged with a crime, ProPublica’s editors wrote: “ProPublica is publishing the names of the two federal immigration agents involved in the fatal shooting of Minnesota protester Alex Pretti. We believe there are few investigations that deserve more sunlight and public scrutiny than this one, in which two masked agents fired 10 shots at Pretti as he lay on the ground after being pepper-sprayed.”

The shooting took place on January 24 during an attempt by agents to clear Pretti and a woman from a roadway. Pretti resisted, prompting agents to yell “He’s got a gun!” before opening fire. Federal authorities later confirmed that Pretti was armed with a legally permitted handgun. Available video from the scene depicts a highly chaotic confrontation, with some accounts claiming an agent seized Pretti’s firearm prior to the shots being fired.

Pretti, a 37-year-old nurse employed at a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, had attacked immigration agents the week prior to his shooting, swearing and spitting at them and kicking out a law enforcement vehicle’s taillight before scuffling with officers, again with his gun on his belt.

He was the second activist killed by federal agents in Minneapolis in recent weeks, following the fatal shooting of Renee Good after she hit an officer with her SUV earlier in January.

This situation in Minnesota stands in sharp contrast to the orderly, collaborative immigration enforcement operation seen in West Virginia over the same period, where federal and local partners worked together to detain hundreds of illegal aliens without reported violence or major public backlash, without the resistance from agitators and Democrat officials seen in Minneapolis.

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By Popular Demand.
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Two-Week ICE Op Nabs Hundreds of Illegals Without Incident – Because State and Local Officials Cooperated.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers arrested more than 650 illegal aliens across West Virginia during a two-week statewide operation.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: ICE, 14 federal, state, and local law enforcement partners, and the arrested migrants.

📍WHEN & WHERE: January 5-19, 2026, in cities including Charleston, Martinsburg, Beckley, and more across West Virginia.

💬KEY QUOTE: “This operation demonstrates how strong partnerships between ICE and West Virginia law enforcement agencies enhance public safety and the integrity of our immigration system.” – Michael Rose, ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Philadelphia acting Field Office Director.

🎯IMPACT: Over 650 arrests were made, including migrants with criminal convictions, without incident, proving that the recent violent disorder in Minnesota could have been avoided if agitators and state officials had not sought to disrupt operations.

IN FULL

In a successful two-week immigration enforcement effort in West Virginia from January 5 to January 19, 2026, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers worked alongside 14 federal, state, and local law enforcement partners to arrest more than 650 migrants who were in the country illegally. The operation spanned several cities, such as Charleston, Martinsburg, Beckley, Moorefield, Morgantown, and Huntington, and prioritized migrants who posed a risk to public safety and national security.

Acting Field Office Director for ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations in Philadelphia, Michael Rose, highlighted the value of state and local collaboration: “This operation demonstrates how strong partnerships between ICE and West Virginia law enforcement agencies enhance public safety and the integrity of our immigration system,” Rose said. He further explained that ICE’s training and support for local agencies have boosted their ability to locate, detain, and handle cases while upholding high standards of conduct and legal compliance

Detainees also included people with prior convictions for child sex abuse, drug possession, and other crimes. The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, a participating agency, commended the ICE team’s approach: “The Sheriff’s Office was impressed with the professionalism and work ethic of the agents and how well they interacted with the citizens and local law enforcement officers,” Sheriff Tom Hansen stated, adding, “We are also gratified that through this program, we have had the opportunity to remove numerous dangerous criminals from our community.”

The effort in West Virginia showcased how effective cooperation between federal immigration authorities and willing local partners can lead to targeted arrests without disorder. In stark contrast, recent large-scale ICE operations in Minnesota have encountered significant resistance from Democrat state officials and local agitators, resulting in violence and two deadly shootings of activists attempting to disrupt immigration enforcement operations.

Vice President J.D. Vance, during a January 2026 visit to Minneapolis, attributed the chaos to “far-left agitators” and uncooperative local officials, arguing that greater cooperation from state and local law enforcement would substantially reduce the unrest.

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HERE WE GO AGAIN: CIA, Clinton-Linked Trump Impeachment Originator Peddles New ‘Whistleblower’ Intel Complaint.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: The lawyer who represented the whistleblower in the first failed partisan impeachment case against President Donald J. Trump has now set his sights on Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: DNI Gabbard, lawyer Andrew Bakaj, an unnamed whistleblower, and intelligence officials.

📍WHEN & WHERE: Congress was informed of the whistleblower’s complaint last year, with reports of delays regarding the full report reaching Congress being reported on February 2.

💬KEY QUOTE: “Baseless and politically motivated.” – Intelligence officials regarding the complaint.

🎯IMPACT: The case appears to be yet another partisan whistleblower complaint, following a trend from Bakaj.

IN FULL

The lawyer who spearheaded the first failed partisan impeachment effort against President Donald J. Trump is now setting his sights on Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard, complaining that his client’s complaint has yet to be sent to Congress due to classification issues.

The classified whistleblower complaint has remained stuck inside Gabbard’s agency for months, prompting an unusual internal standoff and drawing attention to the lawyer representing the whistleblower, Andrew P. Bakaj, known for his role in President Trump’s first impeachment case.

The current complaint was submitted in May 2025 to the intelligence community’s inspector general and was classified at a level that has complicated its handling. According to people familiar with the matter, the document has been stored in a secure safe accessible only under strict protocols.

Bakaj has publicly complained about the situation, saying, “From my experience, it is confounding for [Gabbard’s office] to take weeks—let alone eight months—to transmit a disclosure to Congress.”

Gabbard’s office has pushed back strongly, rejecting claims that it is obstructing the process. Officials have characterized the allegations as “baseless and politically motivated,” arguing that the complaint presents unique classification and jurisdictional challenges that must be resolved before any congressional notification can occur.

Bakaj, the chief legal counsel at the nonprofit Whistleblower Aid, has repeatedly pressed intelligence officials to transmit the complaint to Congress. He previously served as lead attorney for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) officer whose 2019 whistleblower disclosure helped trigger the first failed impeachment of President Trump during his first term. Later reports revealed the whistleblower had direct ties to the Biden family’s business affairs in Ukraine.

Bakaj’s continued involvement in sensitive national security complaints appears to reinforce perceptions that whistleblower mechanisms are being abused as political weapons. In the current case, intelligence officials say the inspector general determined some of the allegations against Gabbard lacked credibility, while being unable to assess other claims. Bakaj has disputed that characterization, saying he was never informed that any part of the complaint had been deemed not credible.

Lawmakers became aware of the complaint in November, after Bakaj sent a letter to the House and Senate intelligence committees.

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Trump’s ‘Project Vault’ Plan to Stockpile Critical Minerals Boosts Mining Shares.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: Shares of U.S.-listed rare earth miners surged following news of a strategic stockpile plan.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: President Donald J. Trump, MP Materials, USA Rare Earth, Critical Metals Corp.

📍WHEN & WHERE: February 2, 2026, United States.

🎯IMPACT: Trump’s initiative could boost domestic demand and government-backed financing for rare earth sectors, while reducing U.S. dependence on China.

IN FULL

Shares of U.S.-listed rare-earth mining companies rose on February 2 after reports that President Donald J. Trump is advancing a plan to build a strategic stockpile of critical minerals through a partnership with the private sector. The initiative, known as Project Vault, is intended to strengthen domestic supply chains and reduce U.S. dependence on China for materials essential to industries such as electric vehicles, renewable energy, and defense.

According to Bloomberg, citing senior administration officials, the proposal would be financed with $1.67 billion in private capital and a $10 billion loan from the U.S. Export-Import Bank. Unlike traditional government reserves, the stockpile would be structured to support private-sector participation while ensuring access to key materials during supply disruptions.

Market reaction was swift. MP Materials, which operates the Mountain Pass rare earth mine in California, gained about four percent in early trading. Shares of USA Rare Earth and Critical Metals Corp climbed roughly seven percent and eight percent, respectively, as investors anticipated increased domestic demand and stronger government backing for U.S.-based producers.

USA Rare Earth is presenting its mining and magnet manufacturing assets as key to a potential arrangement with the federal government. Those talks could result in approximately $1.6 billion in funding, subject to certain conditions, and may include an equity stake for the U.S. government.

Federal involvement in the rare earth sector has expanded in recent years. The Department of War previously entered into a major agreement with MP Materials that included both an equity investment and a long-term purchase commitment for rare earth minerals and magnets, reflecting the strategic importance of these materials.

Rare earth elements are a group of 17 metals used in high-performance magnets, electronics, advanced weapons systems, and renewable energy technologies. China currently dominates global refining and magnet production, but President Trump believes this is not an inevitable consequence of geography, as the materials are not actually all that rare, they are simply difficult to process.

Beyond domestic initiatives, the Trump administration has also pursued international agreements to diversify supply. The Trump administration has announced major rare earth and critical minerals deals with allies in Asia and with Australia, aimed at reducing the leverage China gets from being able to restrict exports. A deal on rare earths has also been struck with Ukraine.

At the same time, major U.S. technology companies have committed hundreds of millions of dollars to support domestic rare earth mining and processing, underscoring growing private-sector alignment with government efforts.

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Mandelson, Ex-Amb to US, Faces Esptein Inquiry Amid Spy Concerns.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: Confidential British government documents were leaked to deceased pedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein—who may have been a Russian asset—by Lord Peter Mandelson, the former U.S. ambassador to Washington, D.C.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Lord Mandelson, Jeffrey Epstein, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, the Kremlin, and Britain’s governing Labour Party.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The leak occurred in 2009, after Epstein had been convicted of soliciting minors; recent revelations emerged in files published by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ).

💬KEY QUOTE: “It’s another huge embarrassment for the Prime Minister, it shows just how poor his judgment is.” – Reform Party leader Nigel Farage

🎯IMPACT: Mandelson faces calls to remove his peerage and a possible criminal investigation; separate documents also suggest Epstein may have been a Russian asset.

IN FULL

Lord Peter Mandelson, the former British ambassador to the United States, has been implicated in leaking confidential documents from Downing Street—the Prime Minister’s official residence—to deceased pedophile Jeffrey Epstein during his tenure as Business Secretary. The leak involved an economic briefing intended for then-Prime Minister Gordon Brown, which Mandelson forwarded to Epstein in 2009, after his 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor.

The revelations have sparked demands for a criminal investigation into whether Mandelson’s actions constitute misconduct in public office and the potential misuse of commercially sensitive government information.

Following the release of three million files by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), which included the evidence of Mandelson’s ties to Epstein, the peer has resigned from Britain’s governing Labour Party. Other documents released by the DOJ raise concerns that Epstein may have been a Russian asset, with one 2011 email to the sex trafficker from an unidentified correspondent reading, “Spoke with Igor. He said last time you were in Palm Beach, you told him you had an appointment with Putin on Sept 16 and that he could go ahead and book his ticket to Russia to arrive a few days before you.” Another email suggests a second Putin meeting was arranged in 2014, and a 2015 email sent by Epstein to himself references “friends in the FSB”—the post-communist version of the Soviet KGB—and appears to allude to blackmail operation.

Many of Epstein’s victims are believed to have been Russian, and another newly-released email shows him claiming that Bill Gates was seeking antibiotics to give to his wife in secret because he had caught a sexually-transmitted disease from “Russian girls.”

Mandelson had served in multiple government positions under Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and former prime ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, as well as on the European Commission, with further revelations about his Epstein links having put an end to his most recent role as ambassador to the U.S.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has suggested Mandelson could now be stripped of his peerage, which grants him a lifelong seat in the House of Lords, and has requested an urgent review of all available information regarding Mandelson’s interactions with Epstein.

Image by World Economic Forum swiss-image.ch/Photo by Remy Steinegger.

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Muslim Terrorist Stands for Election in Muslim Enclave.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: Shahid Butt, a convicted terrorist, is running for a seat on Birmingham City Council in England.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Shahid Butt, a 60-year-old Muslim activist and convicted terrorist, and residents of Birmingham’s Sparkhill ward, which is around 84 percent Muslim and 92 percent non-white.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The Sparkhill ward in Birmingham, United Kingdom, with local elections set for May 2026.

💬KEY QUOTE: “Do not take the Jews or Christians as your friends and protectors… Stick with the Muslims, and for good or for worse, hold your ground.” – Shahid Butt

🎯IMPACT: The candidacy has sparked outrage, highlighting concerns over extremism in UK politics and the legal loopholes enabling such figures to stand for election.

IN FULL

A convicted radical Islamic terrorist who planned attacks on a British consulate and an Anglican church is standing for election in one of England’s ethnic enclaves. Shahid Butt, a 60-year-old Muslim activist, is seeking election in Birmingham City Council’s Sparkhill ward.

Butt was arrested in 1999 and later sentenced to five years in prison by a Yemeni court after being found guilty of helping form an armed group that planned attacks on the consulate, a church, and a Swiss-owned hotel. Reporting at the time linked him to an Islamist jihadi group accused of kidnapping 16 Western tourists in 1998. During the 1990s, Butt also joined an Islamic foreign fighters brigade aligned with the Bosnian army, and he was linked to a notorious Birmingham gang in the 1980s.

Now running as a pro-Gaza independent candidate in the Sparkhill ward, where an estimated 92 percent of residents are non-white and 84 percent are Muslim, Butt has urged Muslim youth to “work out at the gym and learn to fight” in preparation for potential attacks, and said on a recent podcast appearance, “Do not take the Jews or Christians as your friends and protectors… Stick with the Muslims, and for good or for worse, hold your ground.”

Councillor Russell Quirk, of Nigel Farage’s Reform Party, said Butt’s past should “disqualify [him] from standing for election.” Representatives of victims of Islamist violence have also condemned the move, with one source, who did not wish to be named, saying, “Allowing someone with this history to run for office undermines everything we stand for in fighting extremism.”

The Butt controversy comes amid heightened communal tensions across Britain, with recent anti-Israel protests occasionally turning violent and Jewish groups warning of increased insecurity. In October, a synagogue was attacked by a Syrian terrorist, leaving multiple dead.

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Migrant Housed in Taxpayer-Funded Hotel Sentenced for Murdering Hotel Staffer.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: An asylum seeker has been sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of a hotel worker.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Deng Chol Majek, the convicted killer, and Rhiannon Whyte, the victim.

📍WHEN & WHERE: Whyte was murdered in October 2024 at Bescot Stadium railway station in Walsall, England; Majek was sentenced this week.

💬KEY QUOTE: CCTV footage showed Majek “laughing and dancing in the hotel car park” after the attack.

🎯IMPACT: Majek has been sentenced to a minimum of 29 years in prison.

IN FULL

Deng Chol Majek, an asylum seeker, has been sentenced to “life” in prison with a minimum term of 29 years before possible parole, for the murder of 27-year-old hotel worker Rhiannon Whyte in England. The attack took place in October 2024 after Majek followed Ms Whyte from the Park Inn Hotel in Walsall, where he was being housed at taxpayers’ expense, to Bescot Stadium railway station.

Prosecutors told the court that Majek launched an unprovoked assault at the station, using a screwdriver to stab his victim 23 times. One of the blows caused catastrophic damage to her brain stem. She was taken to the hospital but died three days later from her injuries. Whyte, who was a mother, was described by family members as devoted to her child and well-liked by colleagues.

CCTV footage showed Majek trailing Whyte after she finished work and later captured his behaviour back at the hotel. Jurors were shown images of him laughing and dancing in the parking lot while emergency services were attending to his victim. The court heard there was no clear motive for the killing. However, evidence was presented that Majek had previously been reported for making female staff uncomfortable by staring at them. During the trial and sentencing, he showed no remorse. Majek must serve at least 29 years in prison before he can be considered for parole.

The sentencing has drawn attention to the wider debate around crime linked to the asylum system in Britain. The country has seen hundreds of cases involving migrants housed in taxpayer-funded hotels who were later charged with serious offences, including rape, violent assault, and robbery. One hotel resident convicted of rape was reported to have had a prior terrorism conviction overseas.

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By Popular Demand.
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