Friday, May 15, 2026

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UK PM Starmer Withholding Key Documents in Investigation Into Epstein Pal Lord Mandelson.

A parliamentary committee has accused the British government of censoring and withholding critical documents related to Lord Peter Mandelson’s scandalous appointment as U.S. ambassador.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of withholding and excessively redacting files related to Lord Peter Mandelson’s appointment as British ambassador to the United States. Mandelson, a former European Commissioner and Cabinet minister for Labour Party governments of former prime ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, was a close friend of Jeffrey Epstein, and is currently under police investigation for passing the deceased pedophile sensitive government information.
📺 DETAIL: The British Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) has accused Starmer’s government of applying redactions to released documents too broadly. Key information has been removed from documents being used in a parliamentary investigation into Starmer’s appointment of Lord Mandelson as ambassador to the United States. Furthermore, the ISC has accused Starmer of withholding a vetting file on Lord Mandelson, despite a parliamentary order requiring full disclosure of all relevant documents, and has criticized the government for conducting official business through unofficial channels such as WhatsApp.
💬 KEY QUOTE: “Having seen how government is applying redactions… the committee has made clear that, in its view, they are being applied far too broadly – particularly in the case of personal information. We note that no body has been commissioned to review those redactions and assure Parliament that they are within the spirit of the Humble Address.” – ISC statement
🎯 IMPACT: The ISC’s accusations put additional pressure on the Prime Minister. Earlier in May, the governing Labour Party suffered heavy losses at the local elections, following a national scandal regarding his handling of Lord Peter Mandelson’s appointment as U.S. ambassador. It was ultimately revealed that Lord Mandelson’s connection to Epstein was even closer than initially stated, resulting in his dismissal in September 2025. It was further revealed that United Kingdom Security Vetting (UKSV) had advised against his selection, and that the Prime Minister’s office had pressured the Foreign Office to accept the appointment regardless. This week, a growing number of Labour Members of Parliament (MPs) have called on Starmer to resign. Wes Streeting, the now-former Health Secretary, resigned earlier this week, criticizing the Prime Minister’s lack of leadership. Soon after, the Labour Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, announced his intention to stand in an upcoming by-election (special election) for a seat in Parliament, which would allow him to challenge Starmer for the party leadership.

Image by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street.

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South Carolina Governor Calls Special Session on Redistricting to Reverse RINO Sabotage.

Governor of South Carolina Henry McMaster (R) summoned state legislators to the General Assembly for a special session to redraw the state’s congressional map.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: South Carolina’s General Assembly has started its special legislative session to redraw the state’s congressional map, following a Supreme Court ruling that racially gerrmandered minority-majority districts are unconstitutional. This follows a previous attempt to redistrict this week, which was sabotaged by a small number of Republican state senators siding with the Democrats to block it. 
💬 KEY QUOTE: “I have issued an Executive Order calling the General Assembly back for an extra legislative session to address the state budget and congressional districts beginning Friday, May 15, at 11:00 AM.” – Governor Henry McMaster on X.
📺 DETAIL: On Thursday, Governor McMaster called for the South Carolina General Assembly, the state’s legislature, to hold a special legislative session to redraw South Carolina’s congressional maps. The governor’s announcement on X (formerly Twitter) follows the decision made by the U.S. Supreme Court during the Louisiana v. Callais case, in which provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 mandating the creation of majority-minority districts were deemed racial gerrymandering, and thus unconstitutional. The ruling has since sparked a series of redraws across the country ahead of the 2026 midterm elections in November. The governor’s call for a special session comes after several Republican state senators in South Carolina, including the Majority Leader, broke ranks and blocked a redistricting effort on Tuesday. The proposal would have turned South Carolina’s sole Democrat district into a Republican-leaning one. However, while the previous vote failed because it fell just short of a supermajority in the state senate, the special session will require only a simple majority to pass the new map.
🎯 IMPACT: The special session reflects the intensifying nationwide scramble to redistrict ahead of the midterms in November. South Carolina’s special session reflects a broader pattern of states pursuing redistricting proposals that benefit the incumbent party. States like California and Virginia have advanced proposals favoring the Democrats, while states like Texas and Florida have made efforts to boost Republican representation. However, not every state will redistrict before the 2026 midterms. Georgia is set to redistrict in time for 2028 but not 2026, while recent comments from Governor of Mississippi Tate Reeves (R) suggest a redraw there is highly unlikely.

Image by Gage Skidmore.

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Governor of South Carolina Henry McMaster (R) summoned state legislators to the General Assembly for a special session to redraw the state's congressional map.

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By Popular Demand.
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DOJ Seeks to Indict Castro’s Brother Amid Anti-Communist Push.

The Justice Department is seeking accountability for the downing of American-operated planes in 1996 by indicting former Cuban President Raúl Castro.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: The Department of Justice (DOJ) is preparing to indict Raúl Castro, the 94-year-old former president of Cuba and younger brother of the late Fidel Castro, over a 1996 incident in which Cuban jets shot down two American-operated humanitarian planes. The planes, operated by the Miami-based group Brothers to the Rescue, were reportedly outside Cuban airspace when they were destroyed, resulting in the deaths of four people.
📺 DETAIL: The expected indictment, which requires grand jury approval, centers on the incident that has long strained U.S.-Cuba relations. The move comes as President Donald J. Trump intensifies pressure on Cuba’s communist government through sanctions and fuel restrictions that have deepened the island’s economic and energy crises. Recent talks between U.S. and Cuban officials appear to have stalled, and Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director John Ratcliffe reportedly met with Cuban officials this week and warned that the United States would only engage economically if Havana enacts major reforms. Trump has publicly floated the possibility of regime change in Cuba, noting the country has been weakened by shortages and political instability
💬 KEY QUOTE: “It may be a friendly takeover,” President Trump said of Cuba earlier this year, referencing Cuba’s dire economic and energy situation. “They have no energy. They have no money. They’re in deep trouble on a humanitarian basis.”
🎯 IMPACT: The indictment would increase pressure on Cuba’s communist leadership to reform. It also signals the U.S. government’s willingness to hold foreign leaders accountable for actions that harm American citizens, similar to its recent capture of Venezuela’s now-former Marxist dictator, Nicolas Maduro. The Cuban government admitted earlier this week that increased sanctions and international isolation have resulted in the island running out of fuel reserves.

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The Justice Department is seeking accountability for the downing of American-operated planes in 1996 by indicting former Cuban President Raúl Castro.

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By Popular Demand.
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Trump Says It Will Be ‘Tough’ for UK PM Starmer to Survive Ongoing Coup Attempt.

President Donald J. Trump has weighed in on the political turmoil overtaking British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, while criticizing his policies on immigration and energy.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: President Donald J. Trump addressed the ongoing efforts by members of British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Party to force him out of office, following heavy losses to Nigel Farage’s Reform Party in English, Scottish, and Welsh local and regional elections last week. The President criticized Starmer’s handling of immigration and energy policy, predicting it will be “tough” for the British premier to survive.
💬 KEY QUOTE: “It’s a tough thing, unless he can straighten out immigration—where he’s weak—and if he doesn’t start drilling and stop with the windmills all over the place… he’s got to open up the North Sea.” – President Trump
🎯 IMPACT: Trump’s comments, made to reporters aboard Air Force One as he returns from a state visit to China, pile international pressure on Starmer, who is already facing a significant rebellion within his own party. Around one hundred Labour Members of Parliament (MPs) have called on him to resign following last week’s election losses, and one Cabinet member and several junior government ministers and ministerial aides have resigned from his administration. One Labour MP is resigning from Parliament to allow Andy Burnham, Mayor of Greater Manchester, to run for the seat in a by-election (special election), with the expectation that he will challenge Starmer for the Labour leadership and, by extension, the office of Prime Minister.
📰 DETAIL: British prime ministers are not directly elected like U.S. presidents, instead relying on their ability to command majority support in the House of Commons to stay in office. Should Labour, which currently commands an outright majority in the Commons, oust him as Labour leader, he will be replaced as Prime Minister without a general election.
👀 FLASHBACK: Starmer previously faced backlash from President Trump for initially blocking the U.S. from using a military base for strikes against Iran, a decision he later reversed under pressure. Trump has also publicly opposed Starmer’s “stupid” attempts to give away the British-controlled Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean to China-aligned Mauritius, despite the fact that one of the islands hosts a key British-American military base.

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President Donald J. Trump has weighed in on the political turmoil overtaking British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, while criticizing his policies on immigration and energy.

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By Popular Demand.
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Banks Seized Over 42,000 Homes In April.

Foreclosure filings in the U.S. have risen sharply, signaling growing financial strain on homeowners amid high borrowing costs and other affordability issues.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Foreclosure filings surged past 42,000 in April, an almost 20 percent increase from the previous year.
📰 DETAIL: According to recently released data from ATTOM, a real estate data company, 42,430 properties in the United States were foreclosed in April this year, marking an 18 percent increase since last year. The spike in foreclosures, which included default notices, bank repossessions, and scheduled auctions, represents a slight dip of eight percent compared with March, but a significant year-over-year increase. The rise in foreclosures suggests that high borrowing costs, along with compounding affordability issues, are placing immense financial pressure on U.S. homeowners. Such a spike in foreclosures is reminiscent of the period immediately before the 2008 financial crisis. Completed foreclosures jumped by 42 percent annually.
💬 KEY QUOTE: “Foreclosure activity continued its gradual trend higher in April, with both foreclosure starts and completed foreclosures posting annual gains.” – Rob Barber, CEO of ATTOM.
🎯 IMPACT: The ongoing rise in foreclosure activity raises concerns about potential cracks in the U.S. economy. Earlier this year, it was reported that new home sales had fallen to levels well below forecasts. According to government data released near the start of the year, the sale of newly built single-family homes plunged by 17.6 percent. This represented a seasonally adjusted figure of 587,000 units, the weakest since late 2022, and far below forecast sales of around 722,000 units. Due to the growing threat to home ownership, earlier this week, President Donald J. Trump called on Congress to pass a Senate bill with explicit restrictions on Wall Street investors buying single-family homes.

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Foreclosure filings in the U.S. have risen sharply, signaling growing financial strain on homeowners amid high borrowing costs and other affordability issues.

show more
By Popular Demand.
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Cuba’s Fuel Reserves Have Run Out.

Cuba’s worsening energy crisis has led to mass protests in Havana amid U.S. sanctions blocking critical fuel imports to the communist led island nation.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Cuba is experiencing a severe energy crisis, with no diesel or fuel oil available, according to Energy Minister Vicente de la O Levy. Rolling blackouts in Havana have worsened, prompting protests in which citizens burned trash and demanded electricity.
📍 WHEN & WHERE: The protests occurred this week in Havana, Cuba, amid an escalating energy crisis following months of U.S. sanctions on fuel imports.
📺 DETAIL: Energy and Mines Minister Vicente de la O Levy said the country’s power grid is in a “critical” state with no energy reserves remaining, leading to rolling blackouts lasting up to 22 hours in parts of Havana. The shortages have triggered protests across the capital as residents struggle with food spoilage, transportation disruptions, and failing public services. The Trump administration has threatened tariffs on countries supplying fuel to Cuba, discouraging deliveries from traditional partners including Venezuela and Mexico, while only limited Russian oil shipments have reached the island in recent months. Cuban officials say the crisis has intensified since the blockade began earlier this year. The U.S. has offered $100 million in humanitarian aid tied to reforms, though Havana has rejected the proposal and condemned Washington’s actions as economic aggression.
💬 KEY QUOTE: “We have absolutely no fuel [oil], and absolutely no diesel.” – Vicente de la O Levy, Cuba’s energy minister, in an interview with state media.
🎯 IMPACT: The U.S. blockade has crippled Cuba’s energy supply, leading to public unrest and deteriorating living conditions, with residents reporting spoiled food and suffering among vulnerable populations. The crisis has also strained public services and infrastructure.

Image by Damiano Cecchelin.

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Cuba’s worsening energy crisis has led to mass protests in Havana amid U.S. sanctions blocking critical fuel imports to the communist led island nation.

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By Popular Demand.
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WATCH: Transgender Admits to Killing Parents Over Trans Surgery.

Interrogation footage of a man-to-woman transgender who killed his parents has been released to the public, revealing that he had no regrets about the killings, which occurred over a dispute about transgender surgery.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Collin Troy Bailey, a 28-year-old transgender who goes by “Mia,” admitted to killing his parents, Joseph and Gail, in Washington County, Utah, after his mother opposed his plans for transgender surgery in June 2024. Bailey was convicted in December 2025 and sentenced to two consecutive life sentences for the murders.
📺 DETAIL: This week, footage of Bailey’s police interrogation was released, showing him unapologetic about the killings, claiming that he had wanted to change his gender as early as two years old. He explains that his parents only became aware that he wanted to change gender in 2019, saying his mother was shocked by the revelation. In July 2024, Bailey was scheduled to undergo transgender surgery, with insurance paying half the costs and Bailey expecting his parents to pay the rest. Instead, his mother canceled the surgery, angering Bailey, who shot them both dead on June 18. He also attempted to shoot his brother but missed. 
💬 KEY QUOTE: “I went to my parents to do the deed. Kill them… It was spur-of-the-moment. I don’t regret it. I hate them. That was the last straw.” – Collin Troy Bailey
🎯 IMPACT: The case has raised questions about the influence of transgender ideology on mental health issues and violent behavior, particularly in light of recent incidents involving gender-confused assailants targeting Christian schools. The White House‘s recently announced Counter Terrorism Strategy includes addressing threats from violent secular political groups, including those tied to transgender ideology.

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Interrogation footage of a man-to-woman transgender who killed his parents has been released to the public, revealing that he had no regrets about the killings, which occurred over a dispute about transgender surgery.

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By Popular Demand.
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Rep Ogles Puts Forward Assimilation Act to ‘Make America Look Like America Again.’

Representative Andy Ogles (R-TN), along with Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL), has unveiled the “Assimilation Act” to “make America look like America again.”

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Two Republican congressmen have introduced a far-reaching immigration bill to “make America look like America again.”
📺 DETAIL: The 83-page bill is co-sponsored by Representative Andy Ogles (R-TN) and Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL), and has received backing from several other House Republicans, such as Reps. Lauren Boebert (R-CO), Ralph Norman (R-SC), Keith Self (R-TX), Mary Miller (R-IL), Eli Crane (R-AZ), Barry Moore (R-AL), and Morgan Luttrell (R-TX). The “Assimilation Act” seeks to “GUT the Hart-Celler Act of 1965” and “scrap provisions of the Immigration Act of the 1990s,” according to Rep. Ogles. Specifically, the bill seeks to slash net migration 85 percent, end birthright citizenship, end the H-1B visa program, impose stricter asylum standards and character tests, introduce mandatory e-Verify along with a “National Interest Standard,” as well as English language and American civics requirements. It also aims to end chain migration, the diversity visa lottery, and tighten public charge rules. The bill was announced on Thursday after months of preparation.
💬 KEY QUOTE: “The goal of this bill is simple: end replacement migration and ensure American cultural cohesion. This bill will end the H-1B scam, ensure migrants NEVER become a public charge, and make America look like America again.” – Rep. Andy Ogles on X (formerly Twitter).
📺 FLASHBACK: Rep. Ogles is one of the most outspoken opponents of mass immigration in the U.S. Congress. His bill’s provisions on H-1B follow a series of high-profile abuse cases. In January this year, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) launched an investigation into alleged visa fraud involving three North Texas businesses. Furthermore, the commitment to end birthright citizenship reflects criticism posed by President Donald J. Trump, who slammed the idea as “stupid” earlier in the year after attending a Supreme Court hearing of oral arguments regarding its constitutionality. President Trump’s attendance was noted as a historic first for a sitting U.S. president.

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Representative Andy Ogles (R-TN), along with Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL), has unveiled the "Assimilation Act" to "make America look like America again."

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By Popular Demand.
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Final Walz Fraud Report Criticizes ‘Culture of Tolerance’ for Abuse.

A Minnesota House committee report alleges that Governor Tim Walz (D) fostered a “culture of tolerance” for fraud that enabled widespread abuse, costing taxpayers billions, and drew criticism for ignoring whistleblower warnings and oversight failures.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: A final report from the Minnesota House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee accuses Governor Tim Walz (D) of enabling widespread fraud, costing taxpayers billions. The report highlights failures in oversight and alleges that whistleblower warnings were ignored, leading to unprecedented levels of fraud across federal and state programs.
📺 DETAIL: The 84-page report estimates $300 million lost to federal meal program fraud and up to $9 billion in Medicaid fraud, with total theft across programs like childcare and SNAP believed to be higher. It cites repeated failures by the Walz administration to act on warnings, including voluntarily resuming payments in the Feeding Our Future scandal despite a judge not ordering it. Investigators described a recurring “business model” of low-entry shell companies and kickbacks that fueled fraud, linking prior Child Care Assistance Program abuses to later nutrition program scams. The report criticizes Walz for ignoring audits and whistleblower reports and claims Democrat opposition, including blocking subpoenas for Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN), hindered accountability efforts. It argues Omar’s MEALS Act loosened federal nutrition safeguards, enabling fraudulent payments. Committee members contend fear of being labeled racist allowed fraud to persist. Much of the fraud was linked to Minnesota’s Somali community.
💬 KEY QUOTE: “The problem all along has been people were afraid to call out the fraud because they were afraid of being called racist, because they were afraid of being called Islamophobic, and now because they’re afraid of going against their political patrons or benefactors,” said committee chairwoman Kristin Robbins.
🎯 IMPACT: The committee’s findings expose significant vulnerabilities in Minnesota’s government programs, calling for stronger oversight and accountability measures. The report has sparked calls for federal investigations and for increased fraud prevention efforts in future legislative sessions.

Image by Gage Skidmore.

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A Minnesota House committee report alleges that Governor Tim Walz (D) fostered a "culture of tolerance" for fraud that enabled widespread abuse, costing taxpayers billions, and drew criticism for ignoring whistleblower warnings and oversight failures.

show more
By Popular Demand.
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Georgia Governor Initiates Special Session to Redraw Election Map – For 2028.

Governor of Georgia Brian Kemp (R) has convened a special legislative session to redistrict the state, but not in time for the 2026 midterms.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Governor of Georgia Brian Kemp (R) has ordered a special session to redraw the state’s electoral maps ahead of the 2028 elections—but not the crucial 2026 midterms.
📺 DETAIL: Brian Kemp has called on state lawmakers to “…consider enacting, revising, repealing, or amending general law for the division of the State into appropriate districts from which members of the Georgia State Senate, the Georgia State House of Representatives, the United States House of Representatives to the United States Congress, or any other state office elected by district… to take effect for the 2028 election cycle.” The legislative session is scheduled for June 17, following the Supreme Court’s ruling against racially gerrymandered, Democrat-leaning districts in Louisiana v. Callais back in late April. The ruling declared the mandatory creation of majority-minority districts under the Voting Rights Act unconstitutional. However, unlike several other Southern governors, Kemp is not attempting to implement changes in time for the 2026 midterms, meaning any reforms the Georgia legislature passes will do nothing to help the GOP maintain a House majority for the remainder of President Donald J. Trump’s term.
💬 KEY QUOTE: “I think it is wrong to artificially inject race into our politics. I am very pleased that the Supreme Court has erased this, you know, from our legal framework. And I look forward to state legislators being able to redistrict based on communities of interest.” – Josh McKoon, Chairman of the Georgia Republican Party.
🎯 IMPACT: Georgia’s redistricting effort could reshape the state’s political landscape, most likely favoring Republicans while disadvantaging Democrats, who tend to have an advantage districts racially gerrymandered to create a minority majority. However, Kemp is drawing criticism for not attempting to implement redistricting in time for the 2026 midterms, a half-measure that will not help the GOP retain a congressional majority. In recent months, other states have pursued redistricting proposals to benefit the leading party in November. In California and Virginia, proposed congressional map redraws have favored Democrats, whereas states like Texas and Florida have put forward changes favoring Republicans. However, despite the accelerating scramble to redraw, not all states are pursuing redistricting ahead of the midterms. This week, Tate Reeves, the Governor of Mississippi, announced that redrawing the state’s maps was unnecessary, although he hinted at a push for a redraw in the future.

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Governor of Georgia Brian Kemp (R) has convened a special legislative session to redistrict the state, but not in time for the 2026 midterms.

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By Popular Demand.
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White Stabbing Victim Bled to Death in Handcuffs After Attacker Told Police He Was Racist.

A white teenager who had been repeatedly stabbed with a Sikh ceremonial dagger bled to death in handcuffs after his alleged killer told police officers responding to the incident that the victim was racist.

PULSE POINTS
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Henry Nowak, a white university student in Southampton, England, died after being repeatedly stabbed with an eight-inch Sikh dagger by Vikrum Digwa, 23. Nowak bled to death in handcuffs after Digwa claimed he had been racially abused by Nowak, prompting police officers responding to the incident to arrest the stabbed teenager.
📰 DETAIL: Details of the alleged murder, which took place on December 3, 2023, are now emerging at Southampton Crown Court, where Digwa is denying the charges against him, citing self-defense. Nicholas Lobbenberg KC described Digwa’s knife as a shastar, and noted that Digwa also carried a Sikh kirpan knife around his neck. Unlike most people in Britain, Sikhs have a special dispensation to carry weapons as a religious obligation, but prosecutors are still charging Digwa for weapons offenses on the grounds that his kirpan satisfied this religious obligation, making the larger shastar unnecessary. Lobbenberg told the court that Digwa and Nowak encountered each other on the street while the teen was walking home from a night out, with the Sikh telling the teenager “I’m a bad man” in an interaction that was captured by a cell phone video. Digwa is alleged to have stabbed Nowak and “aggressively pursued” him to continue the attack. However, when police arrived at the scene, they appear to have sided with the Sikh when he claimed the stabbed teenager had racially abused him, putting him under arrest. Nowak passed out in handcuffs and bled to death in the street, with belated first aid efforts by the police and an air ambulance doctor being unable to save him.
💬 KEY QUOTE: “[Digwa] didn’t seek help for the man he had injured with his sizeable knife, instead he accused him of being a racist and being drunk… Vikrum said [Nowak] had not been stabbed. This was a lie. This was a man Vikrum Digwa stabbed more than once,” prosecutor Nicholas Lobbenberg KC told the court.
🎯 IMPACT: Digwa denies all charges against him, and the trial is ongoing. His mother, Kiran Kaur, is also on trial for allegedly assisting him after the killing. The case has increased public anger over two-tier policing in Britain, with the officers responding to the incident having seemingly treated the supposed racial abuse directed at Digwa more seriously than the fatal stab wounds inflicted on his alleged white victim. Similar incidents have taken place in the past, with one white victim of a Muslim grooming gang being wrongly prosecuted for allegedly racially abusing her rapists years before the authorities finally took action against them for their abuse.

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A white teenager who had been repeatedly stabbed with a Sikh ceremonial dagger bled to death in handcuffs after his alleged killer told police officers responding to the incident that the victim was racist.

show more
By Popular Demand.
The National Pulse Now has an on-site comments section for members. Sign up today and be part of the conversation in our community of almost 15,000.