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Deportation To Nowhere Sparks Uproar
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Deportation To Nowhere Sparks Uproar

One deportation flight is drawing hard questions because the government is sending people to a country with no clear tie to them. Quick Take Reuters-linked reporting says the flight is expected to carry Iranians, Syrians, Afghans, and possibly one Turkish national. Two Iranian women on the flight are reported to have fled Iran and sought protection in the United States.[5] Critics say sending deportees to the Central African Republic raises safety and legal concerns because the country is unstable.[6][7] The administration says third-country removals are lawful and that deportees receive due process.[2] Why This Flight Matters The planned flight to the Central African Republic has become a test of how far the Trump administration can push third-country deportations. Reuters-linked reporting says the first flight could include about 20 people, and other reports identify Iranians among them.[7] The broader issue reaches beyond one plane. It touches asylum law, removal powers, and the question of whether the government can send people to a country where they have no roots. That is why the story has stirred concern on both the left and the right. Supporters of tough enforcement see a government trying to use every legal tool to remove people without status.[2] Opponents say the policy can leave vulnerable people exposed to danger in a place they did not choose and may not know.[6][7] The dispute is not only about immigration numbers. It is about the line between enforcement and safety. Concerns About The Central African Republic Reuters Africa described the Central African Republic as a chronically unstable country and one of the most dangerous places for deportees who have no ties there.[3][4] The Telegraph also reported that the country is considered too dangerous by the United States government to travel to for deportation purposes.[5] Those descriptions matter because the main criticism is not that deportation itself is illegal in all cases, but that the destination may put people at risk. Just Security argued that third-country deportation deals can send immigrants to places where they have no ties and face danger, which it said can violate United States and international law.[6] That claim is part of a wider debate over non-refoulement, the rule against sending people to places where they may face persecution or torture.[6] In this case, the public record in the search results does not show a court ruling on these specific removals. Football referee Omar Artan has had his lifelong dream of officiating at the World Cup shattered after being deported from a US airport following an 11-hour interrogation. The 34-year-old Somali match official claims he had the correct paperwork and a valid visa when he… pic.twitter.com/E8Yi8iq3ep — Nigerian Trump (@Amblojiggy) June 10, 2026 The Iranian Women At The Center The most sensitive part of the story involves two Iranian women reported to be on the flight.[5] The New York Times reporting cited in the research says the flight includes at least two Iranian women who had sought refuge in the United States.[2] The Seattle Times added that the women had no criminal record and had received court protection against deportation to Iran. That makes the choice of destination more contentious than an ordinary removal case. The legal basis appears to come from a clause in the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, which the New York Times identified as 8 U.S.C. Section 1231(b)(2)(E)(vii).[2] Even so, the research package does not include a court order or binding ruling saying this specific use of the statute for the Central African Republic is unlawful.[2] What it does show is a clash between broad executive authority and a growing fear that the government is using that power in ways that may outpace public oversight. What Remains Unclear Several basic facts are still not fully pinned down in the public reporting. The exact number of deportees is described as about 20 or nearly two dozen, not as a fixed official count.[2][7] The record also does not include the government’s internal risk assessment for choosing the Central African Republic, so outside observers cannot easily test the administration’s own reasoning. That gap helps fuel the suspicion that policy is moving faster than disclosure. Sources: [2] Web – US plans to deport Iranian migrants to Central African Republic … [3] Web – The Trump administration is preparing to deport nearly two dozen … [4] X – US plans to deport Iranians to Central African Republic, sources say [5] Web – The Trump administration reportedly plans to deport people this … [6] Web – Trump to deport Iranian women to Central African Republic [7] Web – US-CAR Deportation Agreement Puts Immigrants’ Lives at Risk

Viral Mugshot Exposes Justice Game
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Viral Mugshot Exposes Justice Game

An online comedian’s $200 burglary allegation has exploded into a viral mugshot moment that says more about our justice system and internet culture than about the money itself. Story Snapshot A Baton Rouge influencer with nearly 300,000 followers was arrested over an alleged $200 theft from his former job. Police say a Take 5 Oil Change manager reported a break-in, and a warrant accuses him of entering through a broken garage window.[5] His mugshot and unique name spread across social media, turning a local case into global entertainment.[2][4] The story highlights how online outrage often comes before full facts, feeding growing distrust of both media and authorities.[1][5] What Police Say Happened At The Take 5 Oil Change According to the Baton Rouge Police Department, 27-year-old social media comedian Dejontay Wings was arrested on a Saturday in early June and charged with simple burglary and criminal damage to property after a break-in at a Take 5 Oil Change on Airline Highway.[5] Officers say the business manager reported a burglary and pointed to Wings, a recently fired worker who knew the building and its layout.[5] A police warrant, described in local reports, claims the suspect broke a garage window, went into the office, found the safe, and took cash.[5] Several outlets and reposts say the amount was about $200, a sum small in dollars but big enough to trigger a criminal case and a booking photo that would soon circle the world.[2] Social media posts repeat the police claim that Wings entered his old workplace, damaged property, and stole money after being let go about two weeks earlier.[5][8] Reports say his prior job at the shop gave him inside knowledge of where the safe was and how to move through the building after hours.[5] Online summaries of the warrant say the break-in happened late at night on December 2, 2025, with the manager later telling police that Wings matched the person seen in security footage and had a clear motive after losing his job.[3] So far, there is no public record of forensic evidence like fingerprints or DNA, at least in the material that has spread online. From Local Arrest To Viral Mugshot Spectacle Before the arrest, Wings built a large audience as a comedy influencer, reportedly gaining around 296,000 followers on Instagram with short sketches and jokes.[5] That following turned what might have been a small local crime story into a viral event as soon as his mugshot hit the internet.[2][4] A feature on him notes that a Louisiana influencer went viral after being arrested for allegedly stealing from an oil change business where he used to work, with his booking photo and unusual name driving clicks and memes.[2] Social posts across platforms repeated the same short line: a comedian broke into an oil shop, stole $200 from a safe, and got caught.[6] In many cases, the “allegedly” in those summaries faded as people shared the image for laughs, even though he has not been convicted. Coverage from outside Louisiana framed the story as part crime, part spectacle, listing “five things to know” about the comedian and leading with his follower count and charges.[5] That article confirms that Baton Rouge police booked him on simple burglary and property damage counts tied to the Airline Highway Take 5 location.[5] Meanwhile, meme pages and viral accounts zoomed in on his appearance, turning his face into a punchline rather than focusing on whether the case is strong or weak.[4] This is the kind of attention that many frustrated Americans now see as proof that the media cares more about clicks than truth, and that the justice system often gets tried by social networks long before a jury ever sees a case. Thin Public Record, Growing Public Distrust Available reporting and reposts rely almost entirely on what the Baton Rouge Police warrant and the Take 5 manager claim; there is no detailed court file or defense response in the public conversation yet.[3][5] Sources show no clear, on-the-record denial from Wings, no attorney statement, and no released video that lets the public judge whether the person in the clips is clearly him or not.[1][8] This gap is important. Many Americans on both the left and the right now believe government offices, police departments, and big media rush out a story, get millions of views, and move on long before all the facts are in. They have seen this pattern with other influencers and public figures, where an arrest becomes a permanent label even if charges are reduced, thrown out, or never proven in court. BREAKING: 300K-follower comedian Dejontay Wings "Wingstoofunny" arrested in Baton Rouge for breaking into an oil shop and stealing $200. Camera was broken but the manager ID'd him by his signature walk.Millions of views to mugshot real quick. #InfluencerDrama #BatonRouge pic.twitter.com/hDj8Us0aKe — SaiGon NEW (@KantG420) June 10, 2026 This case also taps into wider anger at a system that seems harsh on small people yet soft on elites. For ordinary citizens, a $200 allegation can mean a felony record, lost work, and online shame that never fully goes away, especially when their mugshot becomes a meme.[2][4] At the same time, many feel that powerful people who waste tax money, rig rules, or profit from bad policies rarely face the same public humiliation or legal risk. The Wings story sits right in that tension: a low-level alleged crime handled with full public exposure, blasted out by the same platforms that often ignore deeper corruption. Whether he is guilty or innocent, the speed and style of this coverage show how easily the internet can turn a single police narrative into “truth,” leaving regular Americans even more sure that the system cares more about control, clout, and clicks than about real justice. Sources: [1] Web – A Louisiana influencer with nearly 300,000 followers is going viral … [2] Web – 5 things to know about Dejontay Wings: Social media comedian … [3] Web – arrested by Baton Rouge PD in Louisiana after he allegedly broke … [4] Web – According to a Baton Rouge Police warrant, Dejontay Wings, who … [5] Web – 27-year-old man who used to work at Take 5 Oil Change in Baton … [6] Web – Baton Rouge Police arrested Dejontay Wings for breaking into a … [8] Web – A 27-year-old man who used to work at Take 5 Oil Change in Baton …

Visa Loophole Sparks Belfast Chaos
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Visa Loophole Sparks Belfast Chaos

A brutal Belfast street stabbing by a Sudanese asylum seeker has turned into a warning sign about what happens when leaders ignore voters’ fears over mass migration and public safety. Story Snapshot A man in his 40s was viciously stabbed in north Belfast, suffering serious injuries to his eyes, face, and back.[3][6] Police charged a 30-year-old Sudanese asylum seeker with attempted murder and weapons offenses, after he was granted permission to stay in the United Kingdom.[1][3][6] Graphic video of the attack, described by some as an attempted beheading, spread online and fueled anti-immigration protests in Belfast and London.[1][2][3][4] Protests turned violent, with buses, cars, and homes set on fire, while United Kingdom and Northern Ireland leaders focused on calling for calm and warning against anger over immigration.[2][3][4][6] Brutal attack shocks Belfast and stirs anger over migration and safety Police in Northern Ireland say a man in his 40s was attacked late Monday on a street in north Belfast and left with serious injuries to his eyes, face, and back.[3][6] Officers recovered a kitchen knife at the scene and arrested a 30-year-old man from Sudan.[1][3][6] The suspect was charged with attempted murder, possession of a knife in a public place, and making threats to kill, and he remains in custody as the investigation continues.[1][3][6] Video of the stabbing, filmed on a phone, raced across social media within hours.[1][3] Footage shows the attacker slashing at the victim’s head and neck as he lies on the ground, before bystanders intervene.[1][3] Commenters online have described it as an attempted beheading, language that has added to public fear even as police say they have not found evidence of a terrorist motive in the case.[1][3] British Prime Minister Keir Starmer condemned the attack as “sickening.”[1] Suspect’s asylum route and visa raise hard questions for leaders Senior police officials and political leaders have confirmed that the suspect is a Sudanese national who came into Northern Ireland after traveling through other European countries.[1][3][6] The chief constable said the man was living in the United Kingdom on a five-year visa granted in September 2023, after arriving via Paris and Dublin and then claiming asylum in Belfast.[1][3][6] Police said he had been granted leave to remain in Northern Ireland and was living locally at the time of the attack.[1][3] That path angers many residents who already feel their communities are being used as pressure valves for broader European migration failures.[1][2][3][6] A member of Parliament from the Democratic Unionist Party told lawmakers that the suspect’s visa status raised serious concerns and urged authorities to curb what he called “uncontrolled immigration.”[1][6] In working-class areas, residents told reporters they face long waits for public housing and health care while newcomers are placed in their neighborhoods with little local input.[1][2] Anti-immigration protests explode into street chaos and property damage As details about the suspect’s status spread, calls for protests surged online, with accounts urging people to take to the streets against mass immigration.[1][3][4] Hundreds of protesters gathered across Belfast, including masked youths, blocking roads and confronting police.[2][3][4] Vehicles were set ablaze, with at least one public bus, several cars, and even a house reported on fire as unrest spread through parts of the city.[2][3][4][5] JUST IN : Anti-immigrant protests erupted in Belfast Northern Ireland following charges against a Sudanese man for a knife attack — Benjam!n Baluch (@BenBeloushi) June 10, 2026 The anger did not stay in Northern Ireland. In London, anti-immigration demonstrators gathered near Parliament, chanting against migrants and current border policies.[3][4][5] Media reports described some of the groups as far-right, while also noting ordinary residents who said they were simply fed up with violent crime tied to recent arrivals.[1][2][4] That mix makes it easy for critics to dismiss the protests as “racist,” even when many people are focused on safety, not skin color.[1][3] Officials urge calm, but offer few answers on borders and vetting The Police Service of Northern Ireland has stressed that, so far, they have no information suggesting the stabbing was a terrorist act, and they are investigating it as attempted murder.[1][3] They say no other suspects are being sought, and the focus is on building the criminal case.[3] At the same time, senior officers admit that the suspect’s full immigration record, including the exact legal basis for his stay, still depends on confirmation from the United Kingdom Home Office.[1][6] Leaders across the political spectrum have responded by calling for calm and warning against using the stabbing to stir up hatred.[1][3][6] Northern Ireland’s First Minister condemned the riots and described those burning buses and homes as “cowards,” while justice officials said no one should exploit a community’s fear for political gain.[3][4] Yet many residents hear strong words about public order and almost nothing about how this man was allowed in, vetted, and then placed in their neighborhood.[1][3][6] For conservatives, the deeper issue is system failure, not one case This Belfast incident follows a pattern many readers will recognize: a shocking crime involving a recent migrant, a rapid focus on the attacker’s foreign background, and then a rush by political elites to say motive is unknown while warning citizens not to be “divisive.”[1][3][6] Police and reporters are correct that one case does not prove all migrants are dangerous.[1][3] But that does not erase the fact that bad vetting and weak border control can let even one dangerous person through with deadly results.[1][3][6] Officials insist there is no terror link, yet they have not given a clear public answer on why this man could claim asylum after moving through safe countries, or how he passed checks for a five-year visa.[1][3][6] Until those gaps are addressed, it is likely that more people will see scenes from Belfast and conclude that leaders in London and Brussels care more about managing public anger than fixing obvious weaknesses in the system.[1][3][6] That trust gap is the real fuel behind these protests. Sources: [1] YouTube – Anti-immigrant protests in Northern Ireland after Belfast street … [2] Web – Violent anti-immigration protests erupt in Belfast after brutal … [3] Web – Anti‑immigrant violence spreads across Belfast after stabbing incident [4] Web – Vehicles set ablaze as protests erupt in Belfast following stabbing [5] Web – Northern Ireland sees violent protests after Sudanese stabbing suspect … [6] YouTube – Watch: Anti-Immigration Protest Held in London After Belfast …

Capitol Showdown: Gates Pulled Into Epstein Web
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Capitol Showdown: Gates Pulled Into Epstein Web

Bill Gates is about to face a public test that may say more about Washington than about one man’s past. Quick Take Bill Gates is scheduled for a transcribed interview before the House Oversight Committee on Epstein-related questions.[2][3] Lawmakers say their review is part of a wider inquiry into Jeffrey Epstein and his associates, not a separate finding of wrongdoing by Gates.[4] Public reporting says Gates and Epstein met from 2011 to 2014, and Gates has said the contact was tied to philanthropy.[2][3] The released material includes emails and records that keep Epstein’s network in the spotlight, even as Gates denies illegal conduct.[1][2][3] Why Congress Wants Gates The House Oversight Committee has put Gates in the middle of its Epstein probe because investigators say he may have useful information. Reported committee materials describe the interview request as part of a formal review of Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and related influence questions.[4] That matters because Congress is not just asking who knew Epstein. It is asking who met him, who stayed in contact, and whether any powerful people were pulled into his orbit.[1][4] Recent coverage says Gates first met Epstein in 2011, after Epstein had already pleaded guilty in a sex case years earlier.[3] Sources also say the two remained in contact until 2014, with some exchanges described as discussions about philanthropy and meetings in New York.[2][3] Gates’ representatives have said he never witnessed or took part in Epstein’s illegal conduct, and that he welcomes the chance to answer the committee’s questions.[2][3] What the Public Record Shows The documents now in circulation do not prove criminal conduct by Gates. They do show why the issue keeps coming back. Reported Justice Department materials include emails, photos, and references to contacts between Gates and Epstein, and one report says Gates apologized to staff at the Gates Foundation for the relationship.[1][2][3] The Gates Foundation has said it did not pursue collaboration with Epstein and made no payments to him.[3] Those details leave both supporters and critics with the same core problem: association is not proof, but it can still raise hard questions. That is why the committee’s focus matters. In high-profile scandals, lawmakers often use records and sworn interviews to test whether a contact was casual, strategic, or something more troubling.[4] Here, the dispute centers on what Gates knew, what Epstein claimed, and whether the record supports more than awkward proximity.[1][3][4] Why This Case Resonates Beyond Gates This story touches a wider public distrust that reaches well beyond one billionaire. For many readers, the deeper issue is how elite networks operate behind closed doors while ordinary people get the bill for broken institutions. The Epstein files have become a symbol of that anger because they keep exposing the gap between private power and public accountability.[1][3][4] Even without proof of a crime, the investigation feeds suspicion that powerful people move by a different set of rules. Wexner testified he was "completely duped" by Jeffrey Epstein. At that same February hearing, Rep. Robert Garcia said congressional investigators found over one billion dollars had been transferred between them. Wexner has not been charged. pic.twitter.com/nKwmStKlgJ — Epstein File Search (@epsteinsearchin) June 6, 2026 The political stakes are also clear. House Republicans are using committee power to push the Epstein inquiry forward, while Gates is trying to limit the damage to his reputation and foundation.[1][2][4] The hearing or interview may not settle the public debate. But it will add another layer to a case that already sits at the intersection of wealth, influence, and distrust of institutions that claim to serve the public. Sources: [1] Web – Bill Gates to appear today before House committee investigating … [2] Web – Chairman Comer and Republican Lawmakers Seek DOJ … [3] YouTube – Lawmakers reveal what Epstein’s assistant said in closed … [4] Web – The House Oversight Committee conducted a closed-door interview …

Drone Factory Torched—Ukraine’s DIY Weapon
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Drone Factory Torched—Ukraine’s DIY Weapon

Ukraine just hit a Russian weapons factory over 1,500 kilometers away using a homegrown missile — and it’s a sign that Russia’s defense industry is no longer out of reach. Story Snapshot Ukraine struck the VNIIR-Progress defense plant in Cheboksary, Russia, using its domestically made FP-5 Flamingo cruise missile. President Zelensky confirmed the strike and released launch footage, saying the missiles flew more than 1,500 kilometers to hit their target. The plant produces navigation systems for Russian drones and missile components — making it a high-value military target. The strike shows Ukraine can now reach deep into Russian territory with weapons it built itself, without relying on foreign suppliers. Ukraine Hits Russian Defense Plant Deep Inside Enemy Territory On the night of May 5, 2026, Ukrainian forces struck the VNIIR-Progress plant in Cheboksary, a Russian city about 370 miles east of Moscow. [2] President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed the attack and said Ukraine used its domestically produced FP-5 Flamingo cruise missiles. [7] He shared footage of the missiles launching and said they traveled more than 1,500 kilometers to reach the target. [8] A large fire broke out at the facility following the strike. [4] Open-source intelligence analysts confirmed that an FP-5 Flamingo missile struck the exterior of the plant, causing a massive fire inside. [5] Ukrainian Flamingo cruise missiles and AN-196 Liutyi drones both hit production workshops at the facility. [14] Russian Telegram channels also reported damage at the site, adding an independent layer of confirmation beyond official Ukrainian statements. [4] What the VNIIR-Progress Plant Actually Makes The VNIIR-Progress plant is not just any factory. It produces Kometa jam-proof navigation modules used in Russian drones, as well as components tied to Shahed and Iskander weapons systems. [13] Hitting this facility directly disrupts Russia’s ability to build the very drones it has been firing at Ukrainian cities. [1] The plant is a key node in Russia’s military supply chain, making it a legitimate and strategically important target. The FP-5 Flamingo is a Ukrainian-made cruise missile with a reported range of up to 3,000 kilometers. [3] Ukraine’s military has been quietly developing and deploying it over the past year. The General Staff first publicly confirmed a Flamingo strike in February 2026. [3] The Cheboksary attack marks one of the deepest confirmed uses of the weapon inside Russian territory so far. Ukraine’s Homegrown Missile Program Changes the War’s Math This strike matters beyond the damage it caused. Ukraine built the weapon that hit a Russian defense plant nearly 1,000 miles inside Russia — without needing a foreign country to supply it. That is a major shift. For years, Ukraine depended heavily on Western partners for long-range strike capability. Now it is developing that capability on its own, which gives it more flexibility and less dependence on political decisions made in Washington or Brussels. #Ukraine – #Russia: Ukraine has struck the VNIIR-Progress defence production facility in Cheboksary using FP-5 "Flamingo" cruise missiles, with footage showing the missiles approaching the target moments before impact. The facility is located roughly 1,000 kilometres from… pic.twitter.com/Ohi29psjdU — POPULAR FRONT (@PopularFront_) June 10, 2026 It is worth noting that full independent forensic confirmation of the exact missile type — based on debris analysis — has not been publicly released. [5] Wartime strike claims often rely on official statements, open-source footage, and Telegram reports rather than verified physical evidence. [5] Still, the core facts are well supported: a fire broke out at a known Russian defense plant, Zelensky confirmed the strike, and multiple independent sources corroborated the use of Flamingo missiles. [7][5][4] The evidence points clearly in one direction. Sources: [1] Web – Kyiv hit Russian military plant using Ukrainian-made missile: Zelensky [2] YouTube – Direct hit on CHEBOKSARY halts production of UAV electronics [3] Web – Ukraine Releases New Video of Flamingo Missiles Launching Into … [4] Web – FP-5 Flamingo – Wikipedia [5] Web – Ukrainian ‘Flamingo’ missiles, drones strike Russian military factory … [7] YouTube – Big Flamingo Factory Strike Nearly, 1000km In Russia [8] Web – Zelensky Confirms Flamingo Missile Use in Deep Strike on Russian … [13] Web – ​Ukrainian FP-5 Flamingo-Equipped Brigade Identified Following … [14] Web – FP-5 Flamingo missile hits VNIIR-PROGRESS plant in Cheboksary