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Crime

A Murder That Says So Much About U.S.

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23-year-old Iryna Zarutska—combined with a collage the offender’s fourteen mugshots from his previous arrests

By John Leake

Just before Christmas, 1959, the American novelist, Truman Capote, began researching the true story of the murder of the Clutter family in Holcomb, Kansas on the night of November 15 of that year. As Capote saw it, the murder seemed—in an extremely dramatic way—to express the state of American society at that time.

Capote’s research ultimately led to the publication of In Cold Blood, which many consider the founding book of the true crime genre.

I thought of In Cold Blood when I saw the following images. The first is a still from the surveillance video on a Charlotte, NC light rail train showing a man nonchalantly opening his folding knife to kill the young woman sitting in front of him.

The second image captures the man initiating the fatal attack in which he stabbed the girl three times, including a fatal wound to her neck.

The third image is of the victim—23-year-old Iryna Zarutska—combined with a collage the offender’s fourteen mugshots from his previous arrests.

Iryna, who sought refuge in the United States from the war in Ukraine, was riding the train home from her job as a clerk in a pizzeria.

A society that does such an appalling job of protecting young women cannot be considered civilized or to have retained anything resembling manly virtue. The incident strikes me as a logical outcome in a society in which Marine veteran Daniel Penny was prosecuted for negligent homicide. Penny took action to protect people on a New York City subway from a deranged homeless man who was shouting “I’m gonna kill you” and other threats. Penny put the man in a chokehold that resulted in the man’s death, which sparked a major protest. The protestors believed that death threats do not warrant the use of force—that administering a chokehold is only justified after a violent attack has been initiated.

So far, no protests of the coldblooded murder of the innocent and unsuspecting girl. Of all major newspapers, only the New York Post has reported the incident, which is such a shameful horror show as to be almost beyond belief.

It seems the other major newspapers don’t consider the slaughter of a young woman on a public train to be newsworthy.

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Crime

Trump confronts mainstream media with Chicago’s bloody receipts

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Quick Hit:

President Donald Trump clashed with the mainstream media on Sunday after being asked if he planned to “go to war with Chicago,” a day after his viral Apocalypse Now meme sent Democrats into panic mode. Trump fired back, calling the question “fake news” and vowing to “clean up our cities.”

Key Details:

  • Trump’s Truth Social meme — dubbed “Chipocalypse Now” — showed him as Robert Duvall’s iconic Apocalypse Now character, warning Chicago it’s “about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.”
  • Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson accused Trump of threatening the city, though both reposted the meme, helping it spread online.
  • Chicago recorded 573 homicides in 2024, its 13th straight year leading the nation, with aggravated assaults 4% higher than in 2019, according to Chicago Police Department data and the Council on Criminal Justice.

Diving Deeper:

President Donald Trump’s “Chipocalypse Now” meme continued to dominate political discourse Sunday as he sparred with NBC News White House correspondent Yamiche Alcindor over his plans for Chicago. The viral Truth Social post, which cast Trump in Robert Duvall’s legendary Apocalypse Now role, was widely interpreted by Democrats as a threat of war on the city. Alcindor pressed Trump on that claim outside the White House before he left for the U.S. Open.

“When you say that, darling, that’s fake news,” Trump said, cutting her off. “Be quiet, listen! You don’t listen! You never listen. That’s why you’re second-rate. We’re not going to war. We’re gonna clean up our cities. We’re gonna clean them up, so they don’t kill five people every weekend. That’s not war, that’s common sense.”

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker have seized on the meme to accuse Trump of authoritarianism. “Illinois won’t be intimidated by a wannabe dictator,” Pritzker said on X, while Johnson claimed Trump wants to “occupy our city and break our Constitution.” Both posts helped drive the meme’s reach, turning it into a national talking point.

The exchange with Alcindor wasn’t Trump’s only tense moment with the press. ABC’s Selina Wang questioned why Trump would deploy troops to Chicago when other cities have higher per-capita crime rates. Trump shot back with raw numbers. “Do you know how many people were killed in Chicago last weekend? Eight. Do you know how many people were killed in Chicago the week before? Seven. Do you know how many were wounded? Seventy-four people were wounded. You think there’s worse than that? I don’t think so,” he said.

According to Chicago Police Department data compiled by Wirepoints, Chicago recorded 573 homicides in 2024, the 13th straight year it led the nation in total murders. The Council on Criminal Justice’s year-end report showed aggravated assaults were down 4% compared to 2023 but remained 4% higher than pre-pandemic levels. Gun assaults were 5% above 2019 levels despite a 15% drop last year, while carjackings fell 32% year-over-year but were still 25% higher than in 2019.

Trump has openly weighed sending National Guard troops to Chicago, though without state cooperation federal forces would be limited to protecting government property. Pritzker has vowed legal action if the Guard is deployed, while Johnson has escalated rhetoric, at one point urging residents to “rise up” against federal agents.

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Crime

U.S. Missile Strike on Alleged Narco-Boat Tied to Maduro and Ohio Indictment of Chinese Firms Signal Dramatic Escalation in War on Fentanyl

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Sam Cooper's avatar Sam Cooper

From Maduro’s Venezuela to Chinese precursor companies, the administration widens its whole-of-government crackdown on synthetic drugs.

The United States has dramatically escalated its war on fentanyl traffickers this week, with a missile strike on a suspected Venezuelan narco-vessel and a sweeping indictment naming numerous Chinese nationals, chemical precursor companies, and dealers in Ohio.

The Justice Department on Wednesday unveiled an Ohio grand jury indictment charging four China-based chemical companies, 22 Chinese nationals, and three U.S. defendants in a scheme that allegedly pumped potent cutting agents—including Schedule I nitazenes—into southern Ohio’s fentanyl market. The action landed as the administration pressed forward with its “whole-of-government” offensive on synthetic-drug supply lines and newly terror-designated cartels, including a high-profile military strike just hours earlier on a vessel Washington linked to Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang.

In an interview before this week’s U.S. government strikes on fentanyl networks, Derek Maltz, the recently retired DEA chief, told The Bureau that chemicals like nitazenes are amplifying the existing threat from Chinese-supplied fentanyl, which he and many U.S. experts view as an intentional, war-like attack from Chinese state-linked networks aligned with Latin cartels.

“We’re getting crushed with carfentanil, xylazine, etizolam, isotonitazene—all those different new psychoactive substances which are coming out of China. So it’s just another phase of the attack,” Maltz said. “I believe that the Chinese criminal networks, Chinese Communist Party, have developed an innovative strategy, long-term strategy, to destabilize and destroy American families and communities using synthetic drugs, operating under the radar from this ongoing drug addiction crisis in America.”

Maltz also pointed to Canada’s failure to cooperate with the DEA on investigations into a massive superlab in British Columbia, which some U.S. sources said contributed to President Trump’s decision earlier this year to levy a 35 percent tariff on Canadian goods. In announcing that tariff, a White House statement warned: “Mexican cartels are increasingly operating fentanyl- and nitazene-synthesis labs in Canada.”

On Tuesday, the administration took its most kinetic step yet: a precision strike from international waters in the Caribbean that destroyed a suspected narco-vessel from Venezuela, killing 11 alleged members of the Tren de Aragua. Washington has accused the gang of operating under President Nicolás Maduro, who U.S. officials say is intentionally trafficking cocaine laced with fentanyl into the United States in concert with the Sinaloa cartel.

President Donald Trump announced the strike from the White House—remarkably, in near real time—saying, “We just, over the last few minutes, literally shot out a boat, a drug-carrying boat, a lot of drugs in that boat.”

Footage released by the Pentagon showed an explosive strike eerily reminiscent of drone attacks on terrorist vehicles in the Middle East—only this time, the target was described as a narco-terror vessel tied to the Maduro regime. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said more such operations could follow, adding on Fox: “We knew exactly who was in that boat, we knew exactly what they were doing, and we knew exactly who they represented, and that was Tren de Aragua … trying to poison our country with illicit drugs.”

Caracas has disputed the strike, and analysts are already debating its legal basis under U.S. and international law.

Before the strike, Trump’s border czar Tom Homan told Fox that if cartels threatened U.S. forces, the administration would “take [them] on,” explicitly suggesting military force outside the United States.

On Wednesday, Attorney General Pam Bondi framed the Ohio prosecution as part of a broader push to “dismantle the international pipelines that bring deadly drugs and precursor to our shores,” vowing “swift, complete justice” for actors in China shipping “poison to our citizens.” FBI Director Kash Patel called it a “first-of-its-kind international operation,” saying agents had already seized enough fentanyl powder “to kill 70 million Americans” and pills sufficient “to kill another 270,000.”

Attacking new chemical precursors and lethal narcotics

A superseding indictment in the Southern District of Ohio alleges that, since at least 2022, Tipp City resident Eric Michael Payne bought kilogram shipments of cutting agents from China-based vendors purporting to be pharmacies or chemical companies, then mixed and resold those agents—at times directly with fentanyl—for street distribution in southern Ohio. Two alleged U.S. co-conspirators are named: AuriYon Tresean Rayford, 24, of Tipp City, and Ciandrea Bryne Davis, 39, of Atlanta.

Prosecutors say the Chinese companies openly marketed “protonitazene” and “metonitazene”—Schedule I nitazenes with estimated potencies roughly 100 and 200 times morphine—and pushed veterinary agents such as medetomidine and xylazine as “cut.” Payments flowed via cryptocurrency to wallets controlled by overseas brokers, then through layered accounts to foreign banks. The filing also details sales of tablet presses and other equipment to facilitate fentanyl cutting and pill-making.

Charged companies are Guangzhou Tengyue Chemical Co., Ltd.; Guangzhou Wanjiang Biotechnology Co., Ltd.; Hebei Hongjun New Material Technology Co., Ltd.; and Hebei Feilaimi Technology Co., Ltd. Named individual brokers include Xiaojun Huang and Zhanpeng Huang, who Treasury simultaneously sanctioned under counternarcotics authorities.

Counts include conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute 400 grams or more of fentanyl mixture, possession with intent to distribute, maintaining a drug-involved premises, evidence tampering, and international money-laundering conspiracy. Payne and Rayford made initial appearances Wednesday and pleaded not guilty.

Minutes after DOJ’s announcement, the Treasury Department rolled out sanctions on Guangzhou Tengyue and representatives Xiaojun Huang and Zhanpeng Huang, underscoring a synchronized law-enforcement and financial-pressure playbook against China-based suppliers feeding U.S. overdose deaths.

That campaign has widened in 2025: In February, the State Department —implementing Executive Order 14157 — designated eight “international cartels and transnational criminal organizations,” including CJNG, Sinaloa, and Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua, as Foreign Terrorist Organizations and Specially Designated Global Terrorists. The move unlocked material-support charges and expanded sanctions. In May, DOJ brought the first material-support-to-terrorism case tied to CJNG, alleging grenade supply and smuggling.

Dayton sits at the junction of Interstates 70 and 75—a central distribution hub for the Midwest—suggesting the new indictment is aimed at severing Chinese cutting-agent pipelines that turn kilogram-scale fentanyl into mass-market pills bound for American communities.

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