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Washington, D.C. goes one week homicide-free after Trump federalizes police

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Quick Hit:

Washington, D.C. has gone more than a week without a homicide, the Metropolitan Police confirmed Thursday. The milestone comes after President Donald Trump federalized the city’s police on August 11, with federal officers making hundreds of arrests and seizing dozens of illegal guns since.

Key Details:

  • MPD public information officer Michael Russo told Fox News Digital that the city’s last recorded homicide was on August 13, meaning no killings have been logged in more than a week.
  • Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Thursday that federal agents made 53 arrests on Wednesday alone, with ICE adding another 24. Authorities also recovered 10 firearms and U.S. Marshals rescued a missing child.
  • Since Trump’s federalization move, law enforcement has arrested 630 people and confiscated 86 illegal guns. FBI Director Kash Patel said arrests this week included firearm recoveries, drug seizures, and charges ranging from theft to assault on an officer.

Diving Deeper:

Washington, D.C. has gone more than a week without a homicide, a rare stretch for a city that has struggled with surging violent crime. The Metropolitan Police Department confirmed Thursday that its last recorded killing occurred on August 13. The news comes as President Donald Trump’s law-and-order strategy intensifies, following his decision on August 11 to place the city’s police under federal authority and surge National Guard troops onto the streets.

Attorney General Pam Bondi highlighted the results in a Thursday update on X, reporting that federal agents made 53 arrests on Wednesday, while Immigration and Customs Enforcement added 24 more. Ten guns were confiscated, and U.S. Marshals successfully recovered a missing child. “Our mission to make D.C. safe again isn’t slowing down,” Bondi wrote.

The crackdown has been sweeping. Since Trump’s federalization order, 630 people have been arrested and 86 firearms seized. On Tuesday, federal officers made 66 arrests and seized eight illegal weapons; Wednesday’s total of 77 arrests marked a slight increase. FBI Director Kash Patel called it a coordinated operation across federal agencies, adding that suspects faced charges ranging from drug crimes to assault with a deadly weapon. “This is a team effort across multiple federal partners — they’re working around the clock to get it done and your capital city is safer every day because of it,” Patel said.

Trump’s approach has been sharply criticized by his political opponents, but police leaders are applauding the results. Joe Gamaldi, vice president of the National Fraternal Order of Police, said D.C. officers have been “handcuffed” by city leadership for years. “Their average homicide rate has doubled in the last 10 years. They used to average less than 100 homicides. Now they average over 200,” Gamaldi said, pointing to city data that confirms the increase. He blamed the city council for defunding police, embracing “revolving door” justice policies, and undermining rank-and-file officers. “So, of course, they need help. You have to do something, otherwise it’s going to get out of control.”

The move followed a string of violent incidents earlier this month, including the brutal August 3 beating and attempted carjacking of former DOGE employee Edward Coristine, known as “Big Balls.” Two Maryland juveniles were arrested in connection with the attack, though other suspects remain at large.

While opponents decry the federalization of D.C.’s police as a political overreach, Trump’s allies say the numbers speak for themselves: fewer killings, hundreds of arrests, and illegal guns off the streets.

(AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

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Call for Federal Inquiry as Pressure Mounts for Release of Buried Report on Buddhist Land Transactions in PEI

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The Great Enlightenment Buddhist Institute Society

Sam Cooper's avatar Sam Cooper

The authors of a new book, Canada Under Siege, allege that a religious group linked to the Chinese Communist Party has been involved in a pattern of suspicious land transactions across Prince Edward Island — Canada’s smallest province, which they say is increasingly a flashpoint for questions about national security, land control, and transparency.

The authors — former RCMP superintendent Garry Clement and publisher Dean Baxendale — are pressing for the release of an investigative report they believe was suppressed, and for a new provincial probe commissioned this year to show concrete progress.

As scrutiny from the authors and from media including CBC and The Bureau has increased this year, the long-sought 2018 land-investigation report at the centre of the controversy — prepared by the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission (IRAC) — may finally surface, after a legislative standing committee issued a subpoena for the document. The report, which examined land holdings on Prince Edward Island, including those of several Buddhist-affiliated entities, was never released publicly by the regulatory body.

The authors, along with a group of concerned PEI citizens were joined in Ottawa yesterday by Wayne Easter, a retired nine-term Liberal MP and former chair of the House Finance Committee. Easter requested a judicial inquiry into suspected corruption tied to land transactions, saying he is among many Prince Edward Islanders alarmed by suspicious dealings involving the Buddhist groups. (The author of this story also spoke at the press conference on PEI investigations and foreign interference.)

Easter stressed that critics do not believe the Buddhist followers who have come to live and work in the communities established by the China-linked organization are engaged in wrongdoing. Rather, he warned that clandestine actors may have infiltrated and exploited the group’s land holdings for undisclosed purposes.

“You need a federal public inquiry that can subpoena witnesses, trace bank accounts,” Easter said.

In response to a CBC report linking the religious group to Chinese Communist Party entities, representatives of the organizations involved strongly denied the allegation, stating that their activities have no political connection to the CCP.

Clement and Baxendale called for a federal inquiry into what they described as land dealings consistent with money laundering, routed through shell companies and religious non-profits.

Adding to those calls, Jan Matejcek, a PEI-based lawyer who has conducted his own investigations with a group of concerned Island residents, says the provincial government’s apparent reluctance to release a prior report into the land dealings of the Great Enlightenment Buddhist Institute Society, conducted from 2015 to 2018, “raises some doubt about this government’s commitment to transparency.”

Documents reviewed by The Bureau show that the decade-old investigation, authorized under section 15 of PEI’s Lands Protection Act, examined land holdings of several Buddhist-affiliated corporations — including the Great Enlightenment Buddhist Institute Society, Great Wisdom Buddhist Institute Inc., Moonlight International Foundation, and related companies — before being declared concluded in January 2018. No findings were ever made public.

A November 2024 letter from Housing Minister Steven Myers, obtained by The Bureau, and addressed to IRAC CEO Doug Clow, is titled “Re: Great Wisdom Buddhist Institute Inc. and Great Enlightenment Buddhist Institute Society.”

In the letter, Myers wrote:

“I am writing to request that the Commission provide an update on the 2018 land investigation file relating to the above-noted organizations. Given the public interest and recent inquiries from legislators, I ask that the Commission provide a summary of its findings and the status of any recommendations or follow-up actions.”

That earlier investigation is now under renewed scrutiny following a February 2025 directive from Myers ordering IRAC to reopen the case under new powers added to the Lands Protection Act in 2022. The minister cited “public interest” and the need to examine potential direct or indirect control of the corporations’ land holdings, requesting a full report on whether the organizations had contravened the Act or its regulations.

This scrutiny follows mounting concern among residents and lawmakers that PEI’s land protections — designed to prevent excessive concentration of farmland — have been undermined by complex corporate structures and opaque beneficial-ownership chains.

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Daily Caller

Trump Shares When Both Dead And Alive Hamas Hostages Are Expected To Be Released

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By Hailey Gomez

President Donald Trump said Wednesday on Fox News’ “Hannity” that the hostages, both dead and alive, held by Hamas since Oct. 7, 2023, are expected to be released by Monday.

Trump announced earlier Wednesday evening on Truth Social that Israel and Hamas had formally agreed to the first phase of a U.S.-backed peace plan. Fox’s Sean Hannity asked the president to expand on what could come in the next stages for Israel and Hamas, noting the ongoing aggression and destruction in Gaza.

“I think you’re going to see all of that disappear. I think you’re going to see people getting along, and you’ll see Gaza being rebuilt.  We’re forming a council, the Council of Peace, we think it’s going to be called, and it’s going to be very powerful. I think to a large extent it’s going to have a lot to do with the whole Gaza situation,” Trump said. “People are going to be taken care of. It’s going to be a different world. I think really the Middle East came together. Amazingly, they came together.”

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“They have some countries with extraordinary wealth, and just spending a small portion of that wealth can do so much for that area. We’ll be involved in it, but the big thing is hostages are going to be released. It’s probably our time — [which] would be probably Monday. They’re terribly —[it’s] a terrible situation,” Trump added. “They’re deep in the earth, and they’re being gotten, and a lot of things are happening right now. As we speak, so much is happening to get the hostages freed, and we think they’ll all be coming back on Monday.”

Prior to the second anniversary of the Israel-Hamas war, Hamas announced Friday that it would tentatively agree to release all remaining hostages and relinquish power under Trump’s proposed ceasefire agreement.

While hostages have slowly been released since Trump returned to office, reports indicate that 48 remain in Gaza, with 26 publicly confirmed dead, according to ABC News.

Trump stated that the release will include the bodies of the deceased, noting that he has spoken to many of the victims’ parents. Trump added that the parents of the deceased are “equally intent” as the parents of the living to get their children back.

“I’ve talked to so many of them, but the parents are more, almost more intent, but equally intent as getting their, in just about all cases, their son’s body back than they are, as though the young man was alive. It’s just the same intensity. They want their baby’s body back. That’s what one woman said,” Trump said.

“‘I want my baby’s body back,’ and, you know, the son is 25, 26 years old. So that’s a very big part of it, getting all of the — it’s about 28. The number is 28. We’ll be coming back, but, unfortunately, dead,” Trump added.

The deal is expected to go before Israel’s cabinet for approval on Thursday, according to CBS News. If approved, the Israeli military will withdraw to an agreed-upon line in the Gaza Strip, a process expected to take less than 24 hours. Hamas would then have 72 hours to release the hostages, the outlet reported.

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