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Beto O’Rourke drops F-bomb on gun control heckler while discussing Uvalde shooting

Update: 11:08 a.m. with additional information.

Beto O’Rourke is defending the F-bomb he dropped Wednesday night while confronting a heckler who he said was laughing during his remarks about the Uvalde mass shooting that killed 19 elementary school students and two teachers.

The incident occurred during a rally in Mineral Wells as O’Rourke began talking about the need to curb mass shootings like the one that happened May 24 at Robb Elementary School. A man in the crowd could be seen and heard laughing as O’Rourke talked about Uvalde, prompting the Democratic nominee for governor to respond with an expletive.

“It may be funny to you, motherf—er, but it’s not funny to me,” O’Rourke said to the heckler.

The moment caused a stir on social media, and the Democrat’s campaign addressed it.

“There’s nothing funny about 19 kids being shot to death in their classrooms, and there’s nothing okay about refusing to act so it doesn’t happen again,” said Chris Evans, O’Rourke’s chief spokesman.

In a tweet after the Mineral Wells rally, O’Rourke defended his stance.

“Nothing more serious to me than getting justice for the families in Uvalde and stopping this from ever happening again,” he tweeted.

Though O’Rourke was criticized for using expletives on the campaign trail during his race against Sen. Ted Cruz in 2018, the Mineral Wells crowd applauded wildly after the moment Wednesday night.

It wasn’t the first time he had an exchange with a heckler over Uvalde, either. He addressed someone laughing at an event in Snyder last month when Uvalde came up.

O’Rourke, a former El Paso congressman, is running for governor against incumbent Republican Gov. Greg Abbott. The Uvalde massacre has been a flashpoint in the campaign, with high emotions over mass shootings in El Paso and elsewhere in Texas. During a news conference after the shooting, O’Rourke confronted Abbott and was escorted out of the room.

The full video of the town hall in this tweet includes the explicit language that may offend some.

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CDC drops quarantine, screening recommendations for COVID-19

NEW YORK (AP) — The nation’s top public health agency relaxed its COVID-19 guidelines Thursday, dropping the recommendation that Americans quarantine themselves if they come into close contact with an infected person.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also said people no longer need to stay at least 6 feet away from others.

The changes, which come more than 2 1/2 years after the start of the pandemic, are driven by a recognition that an estimated 95% of Americans 16 and older have acquired some level of immunity, either from being vaccinated or infected, agency officials said.

“The current conditions of this pandemic are very different from those of the last two years,” said the CDC’s Greta Massetti, an author of the guidelines.

The CDC recommendations apply to everyone in the US, but the changes could be particularly important for schools, which summarize classes this month in many parts of the country.

Perhaps the biggest education-related change is the end of the recommendation that schools do routine daily testing, although that practice can be reinstated in certain situations during a surge in infections, officials said.

The CDC also dropped a “test-to-stay” recommendation, which said students exposed to COVID-19 could regularly test — instead of quarantining at home — to keep attending school. With no quarantine recommendation anymore, the testing option disappeared too.

Masks continue to be recommended only in areas where community transmission is considered high, or if a person is considered at high risk of severe illness.

School districts across the US have scaled back their COVID-19 precautions in recent weeks even before the latest guidance was issued. Some have promised to return to pre-pandemic schooling.

Masks will be optional in most districts when classes resume this fall, and some of the nation’s largest districts have dialed back or eliminated COVID-19 testing requirements.

Public schools in Los Angeles are ending weekly COVID-19 tests, instead making at-home tests available to families, the district announced last week. Schools in North Carolina’s Wake County also dropped weekly testing.

Some others have moved away from test-to-stay programs that became unmanageable during surges of the omicron variant last school year.

The American Federation of Teachers, one of the nation’s largest teachers unions, said it welcomes the guidance.

“Every educator and every parent starts every school year with great hope, and this year even more so,” President Randi Weingarten said. “After two years of uncertainty and disruption, we need as normal a year as possible so we can focus like a laser on what kids need.”

The new recommendations prioritize keeping children in school as much as possible, said Joseph Allen, director of Harvard University’s healthy building program. Previous isolation policies forced millions of students to stay home from school, he said, even though the virus poses a relatively low risk to young people.

“Entire classrooms of kids had to miss school if they were deemed a close contact,” he said. “The closed schools and learning disruption have been devastating.”

Others say the CDC is going too far in relaxing its guidelines.

Allowing students to return to school five days after infection, without proof of a negative COVID-19 test, could lead to outbreaks in schools, said Anne Sosin, a public health researcher at Dartmouth College. That could force entire schools to close temporarily if teachers get sick in large numbers, a dilemma that some schools faced last year.

“All of us want a stable school year, but wishful thinking is not the strategy for getting there,” she said. “If we want a return to normal in our schools, we have to invest in the conditions for that, not just drop everything haphazardly like we’re seeing across the country.”

The average numbers of reported COVID-19 cases and deaths have been relatively flat this summer, at around 100,000 cases a day and 300 to 400 deaths.

The CDC previously said that if people who are not up to date on their COVID-19 vaccinations come into close contact with a person who tests positive, they should stay home for at least five days. Now the agency says quarantining at home is not necessary, but it urges those people to wear a high-quality mask for 10 days and get tested after five.

The agency continues to say that people who test positive should isolate themselves from others for at least five days, regardless of whether they were vaccinated. CDC officials advise that people can end isolation if they are fever-free for 24 hours without the use of medication and they are without symptoms or the symptoms are improving.

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Binkley reported from Washington.

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The Associated Press Health & Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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Cause sought for Indiana house explosion that killed 3

EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) — Authorities worked Thursday to determine the cause of a house explosion in a southern Indiana neighborhood that killed three people and left another person hospitalized.

The explosion Wednesday afternoon in Evansville damaged 39 homes and crews on Thursday morning completed a secondary search of buildings that had been left unstable by the explosion and no more victims were found, Fire Chief Mike Connelly told reporters.

“It’s a huge relief, for everybody,” the chief said of the results of the secondary search.

Eleven of the damaged homes were uninhabitable and will have to be demolished, Connelly said, and finding a cause is expected to be a “very tedious process — and lengthy.”

The Vanderburgh County Coroner’s Office identified the victims Thursday as a married couple, 43-year-old Charles Hite and 37-year-old Martina Hite, and 29-year-old neighbor Jessica Teague.

The cause and manner of their deaths are pending autopsies, the office said.

Suzanne Dabkowski, a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, spokeswoman, said Thursday the agency can’t speak to any possible causes of the explosion. Dabkowski said the ATF has certified explosive specialists and certified firearms investigators on-site in Evansville, and currently they were assisting in the investigation.

Evansville is located along Indiana’s border with Kentucky. The blast left debris strewn over a 100-foot (30-meter) radius. Debris included construction materials like wooden boards, window glass and insulation.

CenterPoint Energy, the local gas utility, was last called to the home in January 2018, Connelly said Wednesday.

“CenterPoint Energy is working closely with the Evansville Fire Department, State Fire Marshal and other agencies as the investigation of this incident continues,” the utility said.

It was the second house explosion in the area in just over five years. A house explosion on June 27, 2017killed two people and injured three others.

Wednesday’s explosion also brought to mind a massive blast in 2012 that destroyed or damaged more than 80 homes on Indianapolis’ south side and killed two people. A man was convicted of tampering with a natural gas line at his then-girlfriend’s home in an attempt to commit insurance fraud.

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Bolton calls Iran assassination plot an ‘act of war,’ calls on Biden admin to ‘terminate’ nuclear talks

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

EXCLUSIVE: Former White House national security adviser Amb. John Bolton said the assassination plot against him by an Iranian operative, and continued threats from Iran to American citizens on American soil is “unprecedented” and “an act of war,” telling Fox News the Biden administration has been “signaling weakness” to Tehran and should “terminate” negotiations on the Iran nuclear deal.

The Justice Department on Wednesday announced charges against Iranian operative Shahram Poursafi, a member of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, for an alleged plot to assassinate Bolton, who served as former President Trump’s national security adviser until 2019.

US officials said the plot was likely planned in retaliation for the January 2020 strike that killed Qassem Soleimani, a revered Iranian leader and the head of Iran’s Quds Force.

In an interview with Fox News Digital on Thursday, Bolton said he had been “aware” of plots against him for “some time.”

IRANIAN OPERATIVE CHARGED IN ALLEGED PLOT TO ASSASSINATE JOHN BOLTON

Bolton said in the spring of 2020, the FBI contacted him with a “duty to warn.”

“I was given several duties to warn as time went on, and each one was becoming a little more serious,” Bolton said, noting that he went to a meeting at the FBI in the fall of 2021, where officials explained the latest information they had on plots against him.

National security adviser John Bolton speaks at the Heritage Foundation in Washington on Dec. 13, 2018. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

National security adviser John Bolton speaks at the Heritage Foundation in Washington on Dec. 13, 2018. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

Bolton told Fox News he requested US Secret Service protection, which he had during the Trump administration but which was terminated upon his resignation.

The FBI granted the request for USSS protection in December 2021, and Bolton told Fox News that protection is ongoing.

But Bolton said he is not so concerned about the individual plot against him, but rather, threats from Iran against all Americans.

“It’s not just me,” Bolton said. “The regime in Tehran has targeted a lot of Americans.”

“The aim here is to kill Americans on American soil, and its former government officials,” Bolton explained. “This is a broad threat to private American citizens on American soil, and I think it is essentially unprecedented.”

Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani attends a meeting with supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Tehran, Iran, on Sept.  18, 2016.

Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani attends a meeting with supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Tehran, Iran, on Sept. 18, 2016.
(Pool/Press Office of Iranian Supreme Leader/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

He added: “You could call it an act of war, and it tells you everything you need to know about the government in Tehran.”

The Justice Department, upon charging Poursafi this week, said it “has the solemn duty to defend our citizens from hostile governments who seek to hurt or kill them.”

Assistant Attorney General Matthew G. Olsen of the Justice Department’s National Security Division said this “is not the first time we have uncovered Iranian plots to exact revenge against individuals on US soil, and we will work tirelessly to expose and disrupt every one of these efforts.” .”

According to the Justice Department, Poursafi approached a US resident he had met online and asked for pictures of the former national security adviser, claiming they would be used for a book he was writing. The resident connected Poursafi to someone willing to take the pictures for $5,000-$10,000.

National security adviser John Bolton speaks to reporters during a news conference at the White House, Oct. 3, 2018. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

National security adviser John Bolton speaks to reporters during a news conference at the White House, Oct. 3, 2018. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

Poursafi then contacted another person over encrypted messaging applications and offered $250,000 to hire someone to “eliminate” Bolton, an amount that was eventually negotiated to $300,000. Poursafi also alluded to another “job” in the future, noting that it would pay $1 million.

Poursafi then guided the individual on how to carry out the operation, noting that the use of a small weapon would require the individual to get close to the former Trump administration adviser.

“Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, through the Defendant, tried to hatch a brazen plot: assassinate a former US official on US soil in retaliation for US actions,” US Attorney Matthew M. Graves for the District of Columbia said this week.

Opponents of the Iran nuclear deal, including Trump administration officials, argue the agreement emboldened Iran's non-nuclear activity such as its support of extremism, ballistic missile development and cyberattacks.

Opponents of the Iran nuclear deal, including Trump administration officials, argue the agreement emboldened Iran’s non-nuclear activity such as its support of extremism, ballistic missile development and cyberattacks.
(Reuters)

Meanwhile, Bolton went on to slam the Biden administration for engaging in negotiations with Tehran to revive the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, known as the Iran nuclear deal.

“To me, more important than the threats to individuals is that catastrophic strategic policy that the administration is pursuing to try and revive the 2015 nuclear deal,” Bolton said. “You’ve got a government that absolutely won’t honor any commitments it makes—it will do whatever it thinks is necessary to get nuclear weapons.”

He added: “People are deluding themselves if they think that if we give Iran enough concessions, that they gain to let us back into the nuclear deal—they’ll do what they want to do.”

IN DESPERATE EFFORT TO SALVAGE IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL, WILL US CAVE TO EU APPEASEMENT?

President Trump’s administration withdrew from the accord in 2018.

Bolton told Fox News he thinks the threat Iran poses to the United States has been “intensifying for some time,” but said it is at “its highest level now.”

This image taken from video footage aired by Iranian state television on Tuesday, March 8, 2022, shows the launch of a rocket by Iran's Revolutionary Guard carrying a Noor-2 satellite in northeastern Shahroud Desert, Iran.

This image taken from video footage aired by Iranian state television on Tuesday, March 8, 2022, shows the launch of a rocket by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard carrying a Noor-2 satellite in northeastern Shahroud Desert, Iran.
(Iranian state television via AP)

Iran’s regime has boasted over the last few weeks that it can develop a nuclear weaponand even it went as far to threaten to obliterate New York with an atomic bomb, turning the metropolis into “hellish ruins.”

“The Biden administration has been signaling weakness,” Bolton said, noting that officials have said that they consider talks on the nuclear deal “separate from terrorism.

“Well, that may be fine for the White House, but in Tehran, they don’t have those compartments,” he continued. “And Iran sees this jumble of inconsistent policies that we’re pursuing and, that, too, is a sign of weakness.”

President Biden’s negotiators in Vienna, Austria, have not sought to restrict Iran’s production of its long-range missile program.

The Iran nuclear deal contains no provisions to stop Tehran’s sponsorship of terrorism across the globe.

IRAN DECLARES IT CAN USE NUCLEAR MISSILES TO TURN ‘NEW YORK INTO HELLISH RUINS’

Bolton told Fox News that he would “terminate the negotiations” in light of the threats against him and American citizens.

“I don’t think the deal as written would stop Iran from getting nuclear weapons, I don’t think the passage of time has made it any better, I don’t think the concessions the Biden administration has made have strengthened the deal— I think they’ve weakened the deal,” Bolton said.

The flag of Iran is seen in front of the International Atomic Energy Agency headquarters in Vienna, Austria.

The flag of Iran is seen in front of the International Atomic Energy Agency headquarters in Vienna, Austria.
(Michael Gruber/Getty Images)

Bolton said Iran uses “negotiations as camouflage and as a weapon.”

Bolton went on to tell Fox News that adversaries of the United States took the Biden Administration’s withdrawal from Afghanistan last year “as a signal of retreat.”

US soldiers stand guard along a perimeter at the international airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 16, 2021.

US soldiers stand guard along a perimeter at the international airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 16, 2021.
(AP Photo/Shekib Rahmani)

“I thought it was a terrible mistake to withdraw, I mean, the manner in which the withdrawal was conducted was also embarrassing and dangerous, but the decision was a mistake,” Bolton said, adding that “the past year has demonstrated the United States gave up an incredibly important strategic position in Central Asia.”

“They just abandoned it for nothing and it has increased the terrorist threat emanating from Afghanistan,” Bolton told Fox News. “It has increased Russia and China’s strategic circumstances in Central Asia; it has reflected the Taliban ignoring one commitment after another.”

“We ought to learn the terrorists, whether they are terrorist states or terrorist groups, don’t honor their commitments,” Bolton continued. “The Taliban didn’t do it. The Iranians don’t do it.”

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Bolton told Fox News that the withdrawal was seen by Beijing and Moscow “as a sign of American retreat and isolationism and they have acted accordingly.”

“Very detrimentally to our interest,” Bolton said.

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Search for missing New Hampshire girl Harmony Montgomery is now a homicide investigation, officials say

To “sweet and innocent” New Hampshire girl who has been missing for nearly three years is a homicide victim, though her remains have yet to be found, authorities said Thursday.

Harmony Montgomery was likely killed in Manchester early December 2019, New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella told reporters. She was 5 years old at that time.

The state’s top prosecutor said investigators have uncovered “biological evidence” that have “led us to this difficult and tragic conclusion.”

“This is now officially a homicide investigation,” Formella said. “Our investigators will continue to seek justice and look into the circumstances of Harmony’s murder of her and search for her remains of her.”

The prosecutor and Manchester Police Chief Allen Aldenberg did not take question or elaborate on the evidence that lead them to declare the little girl’s death.

Thursday’s development comes more than seven months after police in Manchester, New Hampshire, said that they first learned Harmony hadn’t been seen for two years.

The girl hasn’t been seen since late 2019, but police said they only learned she was missing in December.

Aldenberg called the victim a “sweet and innocent 8-year-old girl.”

Authorities appealed for the public’s help in finding the girl’s remains and identifying her killer.

“The time is now. Time to step up and do the right thing and make the call to that tip line,” Aldenberg said.

“Harmony’s a sweet and innocent child who deserves to be brought home to her family and friends.”

Harmony was in the custody of her father, Adam Montgomery, when she was last seen in late November 2019, New Hampshire law enforcement officials have said.

Adam Montgomery and his wife Kayla, who is not Harmony’s mother, have both been arrested and charged but not in direct connection with the girl’s disappearance. Both have pleaded not guilty.

Image: Harmony Montgomery
Harmony Montgomery.Manchester Police Department

Adam Montgomery was charged with assault after he allegedly told an uncle he’d given Harmony a black eye in June 2019, according to court documents.

Kayla Montgomery has been accused of welfare fraud and collecting more than $1,500 in food stamp benefits for Harmony, even though the girl was no longer living at their home.

Harmony was born in Massachusetts but spent much of her life in the custody of that state’s Department of Children and Families, according to a report from the state Office of the Child Advocate.

Harmony’s mother, Crystal Sorey, and father had substance abuse issues, according to the child advocate agency. In February 2019, a court awarded Adam Montgomery, who lived in New Hampshire, custody.

Sorey contacted Manchester police in November 2021 and said that she was sober but that Adam Montgomery had been blocking all her attempts at communication, and that the last time she had seen her daughter was on video call in April 2019, according to a police affidavit.

Harmony, Adam and Kayla Montgomery, and the couple’s two other children were evicted from a Manchester home Nov. 27, 2019, and people reported seeing Harmony with them in the following days, the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office has said.

But by early December, it appeared Harmony was no longer with them, the office said.

According to court documents, Kayla Montgomery told investigators that Adam Montgomery informed her in late 2019 that Harmony was going to live with her mother.

Adam Montgomery allegedly told police that Sorey picked the girl up in Manchester, according to a police affidavit filed in his case.

Sorey has said that she had been trying to find her daughter since April 2019 and that she reached out to nearby schools and the New Hampshire Division of Children, Youth and Families. She is not accused of any wrongdoing.

Since late December, police and others have pleaded for information, a reward of $60,000 was offered and volunteers joined in looking for any clues.

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Courtney Clenney arrested: Social media model charged with murder, accused of fatally stabbing boyfriend

Social media model Courtney Clenney has been arrested in Hawaii on a charge of second-degree murder with a deadly weapon

ByAssociated Press via ap logo

This photo provided by the Hawaii Police Department shows Courtney Clenney. Law enforcement in Hawaii on Wednesday.

AP

HILO, Hawaii — Law enforcement in Hawaii on Wednesday arrested social media model Courtney Clenney on a charge of second-degree murder with a deadly weapon.

Hawaii County police said in a statement they assisted the US Marshals Service as they arrested the 26-year-old in Laupahoehoe, which is on the Big Island. Officers used an arrest warrant issued by Miami-Dade County, Florida.

She’s being held at the East Hawaii Detention Center while she waits for her initial court appearance in Hilo District Court on Thursday, police said.

The police statement gave no details about the accusations against her, but the Miami Herald reported that Clenney is accused of fatally stabbing her boyfriend in April.

Her Miami defense lawyer, Frank Prieto, told the Miami Herald that she was in Hawaii while in rehabilitation for substance abuse and post-traumatic stress disorder.

“I’m completely shocked, especially since we were cooperating with the investigation and offered to voluntarily surrender her if she were charged,” Prieto said. “We look forward to clearing her name in court.”

Copyright © 2022 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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AG Merrick Garland says he signed off on Trump search, denounces attacks on law enforcement

Attorney General Merrick Garland on Thursday afternoon spoke for the first time since FBI agents raided former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida.

Citing “the substantial public interest in this matter,” Garland said the government had filed a motion to unseal the warrant authorizing Monday’s search, which Trump has sharply criticized as a partisan attack.

It was not immediately clear how quickly the judge in the case may release the warrant and federal prosecutors noted in their request, filed Thursday, that it should be granted only “absent objection by former President Trump.”

Garland said that Trump’s attorney had been provided on Monday with a copy of both the warrant and a list of what was taken from Mar-a-Lago by the agents — contradicting past statements by Trump’s son Eric.

In his four-minute remarks, Garland did not discuss any specifics of law enforcement’s work or the larger investigation related to Trump.

“Faithful adherence to the rule of law is the bedrock principle of the Justice Department and of our democracy. Upholding the rule of law means applying the law evenly without fear or favor,” he said. “Under my watch, that is precisely what the Justice Department is doing.”

Sources previously told ABC News that Monday’s search was in connection to documents that Trump took with him when he departed Washington, including some records the National Archives said were marked classified.

Garland said Thursday he “personally approved” the unprecedented decision to seek a search warrant against a former president but stressed that “the department does not take such a decision lightly.”

“Where possible, it is standard practice to seek less intrusive means as an alternative to a search and to narrowly scope any search,” he said.

ABC News reported earlier Thursday that, according to sources, Trump previously received a subpoena in the spring for documents related to what he is believed to have failed to turn over to the National Archives, which had recovered 15 boxes of material from Mar-a- Lake in January.

PHOTO: Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, DC, on Aug. 11, 2022.

Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, DC, on Aug. 11, 2022.

ABCNews

Garland acknowledged there was still much he could not say — given longstanding department policy not to comment on ongoing investigations and unduly harm those caught in law enforcement’s wake before charges, if ever, are brought.

The search for Trump’s home marked a significant development in one of several legal issues that Trump faces. (He denies wrongdoing in each.)

“All Americans are rightly entitled to the even-handed application of the law, to due process of the law and to the presumption of innocence,” Garland said. “Much of our work is by necessity conducted out of the public eye. We do that to protect the constitutional rights of all Americans and to protect the integrity of our investigations.”

Finally, he said, he wanted to “address recent unfounded attacks on the professionalism of the FBI and Justice Department agents and prosecutors.”

The search for Mar-a-Lago drew a resounding chorus of criticism from Republicans and some others over what the detractors said was a lack of clarity about why such a move was necessary.

“The American people want transparency when you are raiding the home of a former president,” Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said Wednesday. “The FBI is raiding the home of a former president. The American people deserve to know why.”

Speaking at a separate event Wednesday, FBI Director Christopher Wray said of the search, “I’m sure you can appreciate that’s not something I can talk about.”

PHOTO: Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks at the Justice Department Thursday, Aug. 11, 2022, in Washington, DC

Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks at the Justice Department Thursday, Aug. 11, 2022, in Washington, DC

Susan Walsh/AP

As Trump has many times before, he and his allies cast the federal investigation as a partisan sham. Trump said the search was “not necessary or appropriate”; he has not released any information about the court-authorized search warrant.

“These are dark times for our Nation. … It is prosecutorial misconduct, the weaponization of the Justice System, and an attack by Radical Left Democrats who desperately don’t want me to run for President in 2024,” Trump said in a statement on Monday night, in the first public confirmation of a search that Garland said Thursday officials had worked to keep out of view.

He also pushed back on the denunciation of law enforcement.

“The men and women of the FBI and the Justice Department are dedicated, patriotic public servants, every day,” Garland said. He would “not stand by silently when their integrity is unfairly attacked.”

“They protect the American people from violent crime, terrorism and other threats to their safety while safeguarding our civil rights,” Garland said. “They do so at great personal sacrifice and risk to themselves. I am honored to work alongside them.”

“This is all I can say right now,” Garland concluded, rebuffing questions from journalists in the room. “More information will be made available in the appropriate way and at the appropriate time.”

In its request to unseal the search warrant, filed Thursday in federal court in Florida, the Justice Department wrote that its decision was made in light of “the public’s clear and powerful interest in understanding what occurred under these circumstances.”

The government’s filing notes the warrant was signed on Friday and also requests the unsealing of a redacted inventory of what was taken by agents at Mar-a-Lago.

Prosecutors wrote that Trump “should have an opportunity to respond to this motion and lodge objections, including with regards to any ‘legitimate privacy interests’ or the potential for other ‘injury’ if these materials are made public.”

Court records show that responses will be due in the matter by Aug. 25.

About an hour after Garland spoke, the judge in the case ordered prosecutors to confer with Trump’s lawyers and report back at or before 3 pm ET Thursday as to whether Trump opposes the motion to unseal the warrant.

The head of the Department of Justice’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section, Jay Bratt, is one of two DOJ officials who signed off on the request to unseal — along with US Attorney for the Southern District of Florida Juan Gonzalez.

The head of DOJ’s national security division, Matt Olsen, was also present in the room for Garland’s remarks Thursday, a reflection of the NSD’s prominent role in the investigation.

ABC News’ Luke Barr, Jack Date, Katherine Faulders, Alexander Mallin, Isabella Murray and John Santucci contributed to this report.

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Evansville, Indiana, house explosion caught on video; 3 victims ID’d

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FBI Informant Is One of 6-8 People ‘Very Close’ to Trump: Ex-Trump Official

Former White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney said that the FBI informant who tipped the federal agency off with the sensitive information that led to Monday’s Mar-a-Lago search could only be one of six to eight people who are “very close” to former president donald trump

In a Thursday appearance on CNN, Mulvaney said that the informant must have been in Trump’s inner circle, explaining that even he wasn’t aware of the safe at Mar-a-Lago—which Trump said agents broke into—despite being Trump’s chief of staff for more than a year.

“This would be someone handling things on day to day, who knew where documents were, so it would be someone very close to the president,” the former official said. “My guess is there are probably six or eight people who had that kind of information.”

“If you know where the safe is and you know the documents are in 10 boxes in the basement, you are pretty close to the president,” he added.

Mulvaney, who served as Trump’s chief of staff until Mark Meadows took over that role in March 2020, said that he couldn’t float any names because he doesn’t know who is in Trump’s circle these days.

Trump FBI Raid Informant
Mick Mulvaney said the FBI informant is likely one of six to eight people in former President Donald Trump’s inner circle. Above, Trump prepares to speak at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) held at the Hilton Anatole on August 6 in Dallas.
Brandon Bell/Getty Images

on wednesday, Newsweek reported that the raid was largely based on information coming from a source who was able to identify which classified documents Trump was still holding onto after leaving office and where the records were located.

Two senior government officials said that the search was deliberately timed to happen while Trump was away in New York.

Agents arrived at his Florida property on Monday and seized about a dozen boxes, according to Trump’s lawyer Christina Bobb. It marked the first known search by the FBI of a residence of any US president in connection with a criminal probe.

Back in January, the National Archives retrieved 15 boxes of White House records from Mar-a-Lago that Trump unlawfully took with him when he left office. The search warrant for Monday’s raid indicated that the search was tied to possible violations of laws related to the handling of classified material, the two government sources said.

On Thursday, Mulvaney joined Republican calls for the Justice Department to be more transparent in its investigation, but he added that Trump “probably should” release the search warrant as well as the itemized list of what was taken from Mar-a-Lago.

“Maybe the best thing for everybody to do right now, in order to calm things down and sort of reset the playing field, is for Trump to come forward with the search warrant that he received and the receipt of the documents that were taken, and the DOJ to come forward with the affidavit that they swore out to a judge,” he said.

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CDC eases Covid guidance as US has more tools to fight the virus and keep people out of the hospital

A sign outside of a hospital advertises COVID-19 testing on November 19, 2021 in New York City. On Friday vaccine advisers to the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention voted unanimously in recommending a booster shot of the COVID-19 vaccines for all adults in the United States six months after they finish their first two doses.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eased its Covid-19 guidance on Thursday, saying the virus now poses a much lower risk of severe illness, hospitalization and death compared to earlier in the pandemic.

The CDC is no longer recommending testing to screen people with possible asymptomatic infections in most settings, such as schools. However, screening is still recommended in certain high risk settings such as nursing homes and prisons.

And people who are not up to date on their vaccines no longer need to quarantine if they have been exposed to Covid-19, according to the new CDC guidance. Instead, public health officials now recommend that these individuals wear a mask for 10 days and get tested on day five.

Greta Massetti, a CDC epidemiologist, said the US has the vaccines and treatments needed to fight the virus. As a consequence, the virus now poses a much lower threat to public health, according to the CDC. But it remains crucial for everyone to remain up to date on their vaccines, according to the public health agency.

“This guidance acknowledges that the pandemic is not over, but also helps us move to a point where COVID-19 no longer severely disrupts our daily lives,” Massetti said in a statement.

People with healthy immune systems, regardless of vaccination status, should isolate for five days after testing positive for the virus, but you can end isolation at day six if you have not had symptoms or if you have not had a fever for 24 hours and other symptoms have improved, according to the guidelines.

After leaving isolation, you should wear a high-quality mask through day 10 after your positive test. If you have had two negative rapid antigen tests you can stop wearing your mask earlier, according to the guidelines. But you should avoid people who are more likely to get sick from Covid, such as the elderly and people with weak immune systems, until at least day 11.

People with weakened immune systems, those who have been hospitalized with Covid, or those who have had shortness of breath due to the virus should isolate from others for 10 days. But people with weakened immune systems and those who were hospitalized should also consult a physician before ending isolation.

If you end isolation but your Covid symptoms worsen, you should return to isolation and follow the guidelines from scratch again, according to the CDC.

The US is currently reporting more than 107,000 new cases a day on average, according to the CDC. That’s likely to be a significant undercount because many people are now testing at home and results are not picked up in official data.

About 6,000 people with Covid are admitted to the hospital a day on average, according to the CDC data. Nearly 400 people are still dying a day on average from the virus.

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