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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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Now Is A Great Time To Be Out Of America’s Offshore Wind Business

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By David Blackmon

Is the push and pull in the energy and climate regulatory environment hurting the ability for companies to finance and complete energy projects in the United States? The head of Shell in the United States, Colette Hirstius, said she believes it is in a recent interview.

“I think uncertainty in the regulatory environment is very damaging,” Hirstius said, adding, “However far the pendulum swings one way, it’s likely that it’s going to swing just as far the other way.”

Hirstius was addressing the moves made by the Trump administration to slow the progress of the offshore wind industry, which was the crown jewel of the Biden administration’s headlong rush into a government-subsidized energy transition. Trump’s regulators, led by Secretary of Interior Doug Burgum and Energy Secretary Chris Wright, have taken a series of actions in compliance with executive orders signed by Trump since January to halt several projects that were under construction, roll back federal subsidies, and review permits they believe were hastily issued in non-compliance with legally required processes.

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“I certainly would like to see those [offshore wind] projects that have been permitted in the past continue to be developed,” Hirstius said.

That hope seems discordant, coming as it does amid Shell’s ongoing effort to step back from offshore wind and refocus more of its capital budget back to its core oil and gas business following years of unprofitable ventures into renewables. It also seems fair to point out that the political pendulum about which Hirstius warns already swung wildly in favor of offshore wind and other wind and solar projects in the Biden administration. It is odd that Shell only now decides to roll out that particular warning.

Shell was pulling back from its major offshore wind investments while Trump was still fighting off efforts by an array of Democratic prosecutors to put him in prison. In June 2023, for example, the company announced its intent to offload its 50% share in the Southcoast project offshore Connecticut amid Biden era high inflation and supply chain challenges that were already rocking the industry at the time. Nine months later, Shell sold the interest to another party.

The company announced last December that it was “stepping back from new offshore wind investments” as part of a company-wide review implemented by then-new CEO Wael Sawan in mid-2023. A month later, it cancelled its interest in the Atlantic Shores project, writing off $1 billion in investments in the process. Shell’s ventures into the U.S. offshore wind arena had run head-long into economic reality long before the second Trump presidency came along.

That Atlantic Shores project has become an item of special interest inside the Interior Department’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) in recent days. In a court filing last Friday, BOEM Deputy Director Matthew Giacona said the Bureau plans to conduct a full review of the process that went into approving Atlantic Shores during the Biden presidency. He also said the review would likely expand to other offshore wind projects given the administration’s concerns that Biden’s regulators failed to properly assess the true environmental impacts these major industrial installations create.

In addition to that, the Daily Caller’s Audrey Streb reported on Monday that Biden regulators gave the go-ahead to some of these offshore projects despite internal concerns expressed as early as 2021 that granting long delays in their decommissioning processes “increases risk to the federal taxpayer.” Offshore developers are normally required to provide financial assurance to pre-fund such costs, but big Danish developer Orsted and others were requesting delays as long as 15 years in that requirement to make their project economics work.

Hirstius’s concerns about regulation are absolutely valid: Having such certainty is a crucial element for any company to be able to plan its future business endeavors. But every presidency has a duty to ensure that actions by prior administrations meet the mandates of prevailing laws. It has long been feared that the Biden regulators cut important corners related to environmental and marine mammal protections to speed some offshore wind projects through the process.

As this current review process plays itself out, Shell might well find itself glad it cut its losses in this failing offshore wind sector when it did.

David Blackmon is an energy writer and consultant based in Texas. He spent 40 years in the oil and gas business, where he specialized in public policy and communications.

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Man charged with starting Palisades Fire in L.A.

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From The Center Square

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Jonathan Rinderknecht, 29, has been arrested and charged with starting what became the Palisades Fire, one of the most devastating blazes in the history of Los Angeles.

Acting U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli announced his arrest, made on a federal complaint against Rinderknecht, during a news conference Wednesday. Rinderknecht, a former Pacific Palisades resident now living in Melbourne, Fla., and also known as “Jonathan Rinder” and “Jon Rinder,” was arrested Tuesday. He is charged with destruction of property by means of fire.

Essayli said Rinderknecht was scheduled for his first court appearance Wednesday in the U.S. District Court in Orlando. If convicted, Rinderknecht faces a minimum of five years and a maximum of 20 years in a federal prison, Essayli said.

The complaint accused Rinderknecht of maliciously starting a fire on New Year’s Day that eventually became the Palisades Fire. The destructive blaze burned 23,448 acres in areas including the coastal Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles and the beach city of Malibu, as well as inland properties. Large tracts of wooded land were reduced to what looked like moonscapes.

The blaze killed 12 people and destroyed 6,833 structures, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

“The complaint alleges that a single person’s recklessness caused one of the worst fires Los Angeles has ever seen, resulting in death and widespread destruction in Pacific Palisades,” Essayli said. “While we cannot bring back what victims lost, we hope this criminal case brings some measure of justice to those affected by this horrific tragedy.”

Essayli said law enforcement determined the Palisades Fire was a continuation of the Lachman Fire that began early morning on Jan. 1 on land owned by the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority. The fire was suppressed quickly by firefighters, but continued to smolder and burn underground within the root structure of dense vegetation, Essayli said.

Heavy winds caused the underground fire to surface and spread on Jan. 7 and become the Palisades Fire, Essayli said.

Federal authorities are accusing Rinderknecht of maliciously setting the Lachman Fire just after midnight Jan. 1. They say they’re basing allegations on witness statements, video surveillance, cellphone data and analysis of fire dynamics and patterns at the scene.

Evidence collected from Rinderknecht’s digital devices included an image he generated on ChatGPT depicting a burning city, Essayli said at the news conference, as well as in a post on X.

Rinderknecht was working as an Uber driver on the evening of Dec. 31, 2024, Essayli said.

Essalyi said two passengers that Rinderknecht drove on separate trips between 10:15 p.m. and 11:15 p.m. later told law enforcement Rinderknecht appeared agitated and angry.

“After dropping off a passenger in Pacific Palisades, Rinderknecht – who once lived in that neighborhood – drove towards Skull Rock Trailhead, parked his car, attempted to contact a former friend, and walked up the trail,” according to the U.S. Department of Justice. “He then used his iPhone to take videos at a nearby hilltop area and listened to a rap song – to which he had listened repeatedly in previous days – whose music video included things being lit on fire.”

Essayli and the DOJ said Rinderknecht attempted to call 911 after the Lachman Fire started, but didn’t get through because his iPhone was out of cellphone range. When he connected with 911, he was at the bottom of the hiking trail and reported the fire. “By that point, a nearby resident already had reported the fire to authorities,” the DOJ said.

Essayli praised the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, as well as the Los Angeles Police Department and the U.S. Forest Service for its work on the investigation.

“At the request of state and local authorities, ATF took the lead in this complex investigation utilizing techniques unique to our agency’s capabilities,” said Special Agent in Charge Kenny Cooper of ATF’S Los Angeles Field Division. “The horrific loss of life and property was significantly felt by ATF members, and we are honored to utilize our expertise to provide answers to this community. We remain committed to serving with integrity and distinction.”

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