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8 w

Capitol Police name permanent chief hours after union slams controversial interim pick
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Capitol Police name permanent chief hours after union slams controversial interim pick

Michael G. Sullivan, who shepherded two large urban police departments through U.S. Department of Justice civil rights investigations, has been named chief of U.S. Capitol Police to succeed the recently retired J. Thomas Manger. Barely two days after naming USCP Assistant Chief Sean P. Gallagher as acting chief, the U.S. Capitol Police Board announced the hiring of Sullivan, who served as interim chief of the Phoenix Police Department from September 2022 until mid-April 2025. Sullivan has more than 30 years of law enforcement experience in Phoenix, Baltimore, and Louisville. 'Chief Sullivan has succumbed to the pressure of bureaucrats and biased media.' The announcement from the Capitol Police Board came late on June 4 amid outcry over the elevation of Gallagher as acting chief. The USCP Labor Committee on June 3 registered fierce opposition to Gallagher, who was ensnared in a 2010 overtime fraud investigation and later panned for alleged inaction from the Command Center as massive crowds descended on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. “With over 30 years of law enforcement experience across three major U.S. cities, Michael Sullivan has focused on increasing transparency, improving departmental efficiency, and fostering strong relationships between officers, elected officials, and the community,” the Capitol Police Board said in a statement. Sullivan will be sworn in June 30 as the eighth Capitol Police chief since the turn of the century. The department was founded in 1828. It is not clear whether Gallagher will remain acting chief in the nearly four weeks until Sullivan’s arrival. RELATED: Exclusive: Justice for victim’s severe injuries is elusive after he was shot point-blank by police on Jan. 6 Incoming U.S. Capitol Police Chief Michael Sullivan inherits a department still rebuilding from the chaos of Jan. 6, 2021.Photo by Bobby Powell Sullivan resigned as interim chief of the Phoenix Police Department after withdrawing his name from consideration for the permanent chief position on April 8. He said at the time that it was best for the department and the city that the search for a chief be restarted without him. During his nearly three years at the helm in Phoenix, Sullivan’s role was to guide the department through the DOJ pattern and practice investigation. The city submitted its “Road to Reform” plan to the DOJ in January 2024. During the latter part of his tenure in Baltimore, Sullivan was “responsible for implementing the broad set of reforms mandated by the consent decree entered into by the City of Baltimore and the DOJ in 2017,” according to the Road to Reform document. “When I accepted this role, the department was under a Department of Justice (DOJ) Pattern and Practice investigation and facing significant challenges,” Sullivan said at the time. “Throughout my tenure, I’ve worked diligently to navigate that process while focusing on crime reduction, strengthening community trust, and building a culture of continuous improvement.” Sullivan came to Phoenix in September 2022 to a department under deep scrutiny by the DOJ. A federal civil rights probe that ended in June 2024 said the Phoenix Police Department often used excessive and deadly force, discriminated against people of color, and violated the civil rights of “people engaged in protected speech and expression.” 'Our officers and Phoenix residents deserve better.' “In the years leading up to our investigation, PhxPD officers shot and killed people at one of the highest rates in the country,” said the DOJ report released June 13, 2024. “Some city officials blamed a 'more violent population' for the number of shootings, rather than police conduct. But we found a significant number of the shootings did not meet constitutional standards.” The DOJ report cited “pervasive failings” in policies, training, supervision, and accountability systems “that have disguised and perpetuated these violations for years.” “PhxPD relies on dangerous tactics that lead to force that is unnecessary and unreasonable,” the DOJ report said. “PhxPD has taught officers a misguided notion of de-escalation. Rather than teaching that de-escalation strategies are designed to eliminate or reduce the need to use force, PhxPD has misappropriated the concept and teaches officers that all force — even deadly force — is de-escalation.” The Phoenix Police Department employs nearly 2,600 sworn officers. Sullivan told Phoenix news media that opposition to his reforms and lack of support from the police union were not factors in his decision to resign. “Sullivan also played a critical role in guiding PPD through a Department of Justice (DOJ) 'pattern-and-practice' investigation, ensuring that necessary reforms were made in a meaningful and sustainable manner,” the Capitol Police Board statement said. “Additionally, he overhauled PPD's use-of-force policies, ensuring officers receive updated training on best practices, and restructured the Organizational Integrity Bureau to reinforce accountability within the department.” RELATED: Capitol Police union raps appointment of controversial acting chief with checkered history The U.S. Capitol Police union accuses department leadership of failing officers during the protests and rioting on Jan. 6, 2021. Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images In February 2025, a Phoenix Law Enforcement Association survey found that union members felt Sullivan was leading the police department in the wrong direction. Darrell Kriplean, president of the officers’ union, rapped Sullivan for an alleged lack of support. “Rather than defending our officers when they acted properly and within department policy, Chief Sullivan has succumbed to the pressure of bureaucrats and biased media,” Kriplean said, according to the Arizona Republic. “Our officers and Phoenix residents deserve better.” Sullivan came to Phoenix after three years as deputy commissioner with the Baltimore Police Department, which underwent a federal civil rights probe that ended in 2016. Sullivan led the Patrol Operations Division, Criminal Investigations Division, and the Data Driven Strategies Division. The Baltimore Police Department has more than 2,500 sworn officers and professional staff. The DOJ said that Baltimore Police Department “engages in a pattern or practice of conduct that violates the First and Fourth Amendments of the Constitution as well as federal anti-discrimination laws.” “Our investigation found that Baltimore is a city where the bonds of trust have been broken, and that the Baltimore Police Department engaged in a pattern or practice of unlawful and unconstitutional conduct, ranging from the use of excessive force to unjustified stops, seizures, and arrests,” said then-U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch. Prior to the Baltimore assignment, Sullivan spent 24 years with the Louisville Police Department, rising to the rank of deputy chief in 2015. Sullivan’s experience on paper seems a solid match for the U.S. Capitol Police, a department rebuilding after the civil unrest on Jan. 6 with a long-standing problem of internal corruption and alleged favoritism in officer discipline cases. “I’m pleased that the Capitol Police Board went outside of the current USCP leadership to bring in someone who can hopefully reform the Capitol Police command structure,” said U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.), whose Committee on House Administration Subcommittee on Oversight conducted extensive investigation of the department during the 118th Congress. “I encourage Chief Sullivan to very quickly look at the department’s OPR [Office of Professional Responsibility] files and then clean up the systemic problems with equitable disciplinary actions,” Loudermilk told Blaze News. Assistant Chief Gallagher was recommended for termination in the wake of a 2010 overtime fraud scandal, but then-Chief Kim Dine intervened in the case and Gallagher received only a 10-day unpaid suspension. The Capitol Police department is retooling after an exodus in the wake of Jan. 6 protests and rioting that injured more than 100 officers. During Manger’s nearly four-year tenure, Congress provided massive budget increases to refill the ranks and help the department adjust to an era of rapidly increasing threats against lawmakers. Fallout from Jan. 6 includes the killing of Air Force veteran Ashli Babbitt by Lt. Michael Leroy Byrd that led to an ongoing $30 million wrongful death lawsuit by Judicial Watch Inc. on behalf of Aaron Babbitt and his late wife’s estate. RELATED: Retiring Capitol Police chief takes shots at Jan. 6 protester Ashli Babbitt, settlement of civil lawsuit Lt. Michael L. Byrd, who killed Ashli Babbitt at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, has 'significant' discipline history including gun incidents, U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.) disclosed in November 2024. Photos by Judicial Watch, John Sullivan In the months after the fatal shooting outside the Speaker’s Lobby, Capitol Police kept Byrd’s name from the public, spent more than $35,000 to house him in an admiral’s suite at Maryland’s Joint Base Andrews, paid him $37,000 in retention funds, and paid for $21,000 in security upgrades at his Maryland home. Loudermilk told Manger in a November 2024 letter that he was troubled that the department promoted Byrd to captain despite a nearly quarter-century discipline record that included reckless use and handling of a firearm, firing into a fleeing van near his home while a neighbor was in the line of fire, and abandoning his post in the Speaker’s Office for a cloakroom card game. Loudermilk told Manger to supply a list of information about the handling of Byrd’s case, but the just-retired chief ignored the letter, sources told Blaze News. The department is also under the cloud of false testimony given by Officer Harry Dunn and Special Agent David Lazarus against the Oath Keepers in the 2022 seditious conspiracy trial. An investigation by Blaze News found that the story told by Dunn and Lazarus about an alleged confrontation with a group of Oath Keepers could not have happened as described under oath because Lazarus was not even in the Capitol at the time. RELATED: Pentagon should face probe for possible nefarious acts at Capitol Jan. 6, former top Army official says Former U.S. Capitol Police Chief Steven A. Sund testified before Congress about political resistance to his requests for National Guard help on Jan. 6, 2021.Photo by Erin Scott/The New York Times/Bloomberg via Getty Images Congress is also faced with questions about oversight of USCP by the three-person Capitol Police Board. Loudermilk’s committee found that politics played a major role in the denial of National Guard troops to help quell riots at the Capitol on Jan. 6. Former USCP Chief Steven A. Sund has testified that he struggled to get support for Guard presence at the Capitol because the Capitol Police Board was worried about blowback from then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). Under regulations in force at the time, Sund could not go directly to the Pentagon to secure help from a D.C. National Guard quick-reaction force. His requests for help were denied for days leading up to Jan. 6 and for 71 minutes after crowds rolled over the outer police barricades on Jan. 6. Sund said the chief needs authority to quickly get Guard assistance to put down riots at or near the Capitol. For the first time in 119 years, the D.C. National Guard was not allowed to respond to Washington, D.C., riots because Democrats in Congress and politicized generals at the Pentagon reportedly stymied Sund’s calls for aid. Sund activated the Capital Region mutual aid system, which rushed 1,700 officers from surrounding jurisdictions to retake the Capitol. By the time the first D.C. Guardsmen set foot on Capitol grounds on Jan. 6, officers from the New Jersey State Police had made it to the Capitol to lend aid. Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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8 w

Alleged manifesto of murder suspect Luigi Mangione highlights lessons learned from Unabomber: Court docs
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Alleged manifesto of murder suspect Luigi Mangione highlights lessons learned from Unabomber: Court docs

Police caught up with Luigi Mangione, 27, at a McDonald's in Altoona, Pennsylvania, five days after he allegedly gunned down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside a Manhattan hotel last December. In addition to allegedly finding a 9mm handgun, a homemade silencer, multiple cartridges, a fake New Jersey ID, a passport, approximately $7,800 in cash, and a written admission of guilt on his person, police reportedly found a notebook detailing plans for the shooting.Mangione's defense attorney asked the court overseeing the case to rule the notebook inadmissible, claiming the search of Mangione's backpack where it was located violated his Fourth Amendment rights. The defense also asked the court to dismiss his indictment altogether.Prosecutors responded with a damning court filing on Wednesday containing entries from Mangione's alleged notebook, which they claim reveals "in unambiguous terms [the] defendant's intent and motive in deliberately assassinating the CEO of the country's largest health company."'Yet another indirect victim of the long-term lunacy of Ted Kaczynski.'In an Aug. 15, 2024, entry, Mangione allegedly wrote, "I finally feel confident about what I will do. The details are coming together. And I don't feel any doubt about whether it's right/justified. I'm glad — in a way — that I've procrastinated bc it allowed me to learn more about UHC. KMD [the initials of another apparent target considered] would've been an unjustified catastrophe that would be perceived mostly as sick, but more importantly unhelpful."Prosecutors indicated that Mangione traveled to New York the first week of December 2024 to attend UHC's investor conference, where Thompson was scheduled to speak. Thompson was, however, shot outside the Hilton Hotel in Manhattan hours prior to his presentation.The entries shared in the court documents indicate that the author initially contemplated killing many more people, possibly by way of bombing; however, he decided against it, citing lessons learned from Theodore "Ted" Kaczynski, a domestic terrorist who targeted businessmen, scholars, and random civilians with homemade bombs from 1978 to 1995, injuring 23 victims and ultimately killing three people.James R. Fitzgerald, a retired supervisory special agent with the FBI's Behavioral Analysis Unit best known for his role in the Unabomber investigation, told Blaze News, "It seems Brian Thompson, after his December '24 execution-style murder by an unhinged, misguided, and misinformed young zealot, is yet another indirect victim of the long-term lunacy of Ted Kaczynski, aka the Unabomber."RELATED: Dear Uncle Ted Mugshot of domestic terrorist Ted Kaczynski. Photo by Bureau of Prisons/Getty ImageOn Oct. 22, 2024, Mangione allegedly praised Kaczynski, the so-called Unabomber, but noted what he apparently got wrong."The problem with most revolutionary acts is that the message is lost on normies," says the entry. "For example, Ted K makes some good points on the future of humanity, but to make his point he indiscriminately mailbombs innocents. Normies categorize him as an insane serial killer, focus on the act/atrocities themselves, and dismiss his ideas."'There's an implied sense of superiority in how he critiques Kaczynski’s failure to communicate his message.'The Unabomber condemned all forms of technology and advocated for cultural primitivism in his 35,000-word manifesto titled "Industrial Society and Its Future," which he submitted to the Washington Post for publication. Whereas Mangione appears to enjoy standing in the spotlight, Kaczynski was a recluse who evidently preferred to remain planted in his remote Montana cabin. "Most importantly — by committing indiscriminate atrocities — he becomes a monster, which makes his ideas those of a monster, no matter how true," continued the entry in the notebook attributed to Mangione. "He crosses the line from revolutionary anarchist to terrorist — the worst thing a person can be."Dr. Kimberly Przeszlowski, assistant professor of criminal justice at Quinnipiac University, told Blaze News, "Mangione's reference to 'normies' misunderstanding Kaczynski as merely an insane serial killer reveals more than just admiration — it signals a detachment from mainstream society and a belief that he perceives the world more clearly than others.""There's an implied sense of superiority in how he critiques Kaczynski’s failure to communicate his message, as if he believes he could do it better," continued Przeszlowski. "His alleged decision to avoid using bombings — unlike Kaczynski — seems deliberate, a way to present himself as a more focused and effective messenger."Given the adoration of Mangione by elements of the American left, it appears he has been somewhat successful in this regard.RELATED: ‘Saint Luigi’? America’s moral compass couldn’t be more broken Photo by Guy Smallman/Getty ImagesPrzeszlowski suggested that the alleged author of the journal entries does not necessarily regard himself "as someone trying to refine an ideology, but as someone capable of packaging and delivering it in a way that gains broader acceptance or resonates with a larger audience."Clinical psychologist Franklin Carvajal suggested to Blaze News that Mangione is neither a psychopath nor a serial killer but rather an individual desirous for a "new cultural norm to emerge based on what he sees as his idea of justice.""When he says 'normies' he means the average person who has been indoctrinated in what he believes is a different cultural framework or perspective," said Carvajal.The psychologist noted that Mangione shares in common with Kaczynski and Timothy McVeigh the belief that "the end justifies the means."Przeszlowski suggested that "while their tactics and time periods differ, [Mangione and Kaczynski's] underlying motivations share common threads — anti-modern views, deep distrust of institutions, and the belief that violence can serve as a wake-up call."Mangione allegedly noted further in the notebook entry, "This is the problem with most militants that rebel against often-real injustices: They commit an atrocity whose horror either outweighs the impact of their message, or whose distance from their message prevents normies from connecting the dots. Consequently, the revolutionary idea becomes associated with extremism, incoherence or evil — an idea that no reasonable member of society could approve of."The entry hints that the author contemplated bombing insurance companies' headquarters but ultimately determined that "bombs=terrorism" and would read as the "unjustified anger of someone who simply got sick/had bad luck and took their frustration out on the insurance industry."Rather than engaging in bombing as Kaczynski had, the author of the entry suggested that one should instead "wack [sic] the CEO at the annual parasitic bean-counter convention," adding that the message the "greedy bastard ... had it coming" would be abundantly clear.'These parasites simply had it coming.'"As I had to constantly remind myself during my time on the UNABOM Task Force in the mid-1990s, while reading and rereading the 'Manifesto' day after day, one's actions greatly supersede one's words in any supposedly 'civilized' society," said Fitzgerald. "That is, in this context, unprovoked violence ultimately weakens one's argument. It certainly doesn't strengthen it. But to the unbalanced, that doesn't wholly register and/or guide them accordingly." 'The Kaczynskis and the Mangiones of the world are poor substitutes for great thinkers or philosophers," added Fitzgerald. "Their homicidal actions in the long run devalue their words — except to the also unhinged, misguided, and misinformed among us."RELATED: Luigi Mangione-based shows to hit American stage, turning murder suspect into 'accidental folk hero' Photo by Steven Hirsch - Pool/Getty Images Prosecutors' Wednesday filing also included the note police reportedly found on Mangione at the time of his arrest, which states, "To the Feds, I’ll keep this short because I do respect what you do for our country. To save you a lengthy investigation, I state plainly I wasn’t working with anyone. This was fairly trivial, some elementary social engineering, basic [computer-aided design], and a lot of patience.""I do apologize for any strife or trauma, but it had to be done. Frankly, these parasites simply had it coming," continued the note.Mangione, who faces both New York state and federal charges in the murder of Thompson, has pleaded not guilty to murder as an act of terrorism as well as weapons charges.Attorney General Pam Bondi has impressed upon federal prosecutors the need to seek the death penalty against Mangione, noting in an April 1 release, "Luigi Mangione’s murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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8 w

'Put them all in an arena and let 'em kill the hell out of each other': Seething sheriff's brutal 'wish' for teen gangbangers
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'Put them all in an arena and let 'em kill the hell out of each other': Seething sheriff's brutal 'wish' for teen gangbangers

Mobile County Sheriff Paul Burch may have just read the minds of the majority of citizens in his home state of Alabama who've had it with teen gang violence.A 2-year-old boy was shot in the face while he was in bed at St. Stephens Woods Apartments in Prichard around 1 a.m. Wednesday, WKRG-TV reported.'And a message to the gang members is, "I dare you to pull a gun on one of my guys. Could be the last thing you do."'Sheriff Burch told the station he believes it was a gang-related drive-by shooting.“They’re just gutless punks who fired from outside the residence into a bedroom window,” Burch said, according to WKRG. “So you know, there was no forced entry or attempt to enter the apartment.”Burch also believes the victim's teenage brother, "who’s involved in gang activity," may have been the intended target, the station reported.RELATED: Husband, wife, 3 children asleep when intruder breaks window, enters their home after midnight. So husband grabs his gun. Photo by Estevan Oriol/PYMCA/Avalon/Getty ImagesWhat's more, Burch told WKRG that a shooting took place a few hours later — and it was just “a stone’s throw away."“We don’t know if it’s related or not. But you know, I don’t believe in coincidences. So we believe that this shooting was gang-related and was in retaliation for a shooting on Vestavia Street on June 1 with some other gang members, and there’s been some back and forth,” the sheriff told the station. “After the shooting at 1 a.m. this morning, there was a shooting on Vestavia Street around 4 a.m.”The sheriff threw down at the violent gangbangers, telling WKRG that "this is going to be a priority for our special operations division. And a message to the gang members is, ‘I dare you to pull a gun on one of my guys. Could be the last thing you do.'"RELATED: Alabama mom arrested after 2 kilograms of cocaine are found in 3-year-old's backpack, police say Burch also expressed a "wish" for them — and one that would "solve" the heartache gangs bring to the county. “It’s teenagers, it’s gangs," the sheriff told WKRG. "And frankly, I wish we could put them all in an arena and let 'em kill the hell out of each other 'cause that would solve the problem."The 2-year-old boy has had surgery, Burch added to the station, which reported that his condition is unknown, and there have been no arrests thus far.The sheriff’s office said those with information about the shootings should call 251-574-8633.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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8 w

Trump vows to EXPOSE shadow government with probe of alleged Biden autopen power-grab
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Trump vows to EXPOSE shadow government with probe of alleged Biden autopen power-grab

American voters feared that a bureaucrat shadow government had seized control of the White House during Biden's administration.Such concerns were initially sparked by former President Joe Biden's very public mental decline that even seemingly prompted the Democratic Party to push him out of the running for a second term. Concerns grew that Biden's unelected aides were potentially controlling the White House after reports of autopen abuses surfaced.'Politically, this should end the Democratic Party as a major political entity in the United States.'President Donald Trump announced Wednesday that his administration opened an investigation into Biden's aides to determine who was in charge of the nation the last four years.RELATED: Who was president these last four years? We deserve an answer Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty ImagesA White House memorandum read, "In recent months, it has become increasingly apparent that former President Biden's aides abused the power of Presidential signatures through the use of an autopen to conceal Biden's cognitive decline and assert Article II authority.""This conspiracy marks one of the most dangerous and concerning scandals in American history," the memo continued. "The American public was purposefully shielded from discovering who wielded the executive power, all while Biden's signature was deployed across thousands of documents to effect radical policy shifts."Trump argued that despite Biden's "serious cognitive decline," the administration "issued over 1,200 Presidential documents, appointed 235 judges to the Federal bench, and issued more pardons and commutations than any administration in United States history." Just one month before leaving office, the Biden administration commuted the sentences of 37 criminals facing death row, he noted.Trump questioned whether Biden was aware of any of those actions taken by his administration. He directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate "whether certain individuals conspired to deceive the public about Biden's mental state and unconstitutionally exercise the authorities and responsibilities of the President."RELATED: DOGE subcommittee reveals how Biden autopen may have funneled money to leftist NGOs Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images The Oversight Project previously launched its own investigation into the Biden administration's use of autopen and the former president's mental decline. Mike Howell, the president of the Oversight Project, told Blaze News, "Actions taken on behalf of an incapacitated Biden should have no legal effect. Those who abused the situation have potentially committed a series of crimes, mostly related to impersonation, fraud, and civil rights abuses. Those who were aware of this happening also have legal liability."Politically, this should end the Democratic Party as a major political entity in the United States. The entire apparatus was in on this. There should be no coming back from it," Howell added.Biden responded to Trump's investigation announcement, claiming he was aware of all the actions taken under his presidency."Let me be clear: I made the decisions during my presidency. I made the decisions about the pardons, executive orders, legislation, and proclamations. Any suggestion that I didn't is ridiculous and false," Biden said.He accused Trump of attempting to distract the public from the controversy surrounding his "big, beautiful bill.""This is nothing more than a distraction by Donald Trump and congressional Republicans who are working to push disastrous legislation that would cut essential programs like Medicaid and raise costs on American families, all to pay for tax breaks for the ultra-wealthy and big corporations," Biden stated.Mike Howell is a contributor to Blaze News. Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
8 w

Talking Heads’ ‘Psycho Killer’ Finally Gets a Music Video
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Talking Heads’ ‘Psycho Killer’ Finally Gets a Music Video

An expanded edition of their debut LP features a remaster of the original album, along with B-sides, alternate versions, acoustic versions and prev. unreleased live recordings. The post Talking Heads’ ‘Psycho Killer’ Finally Gets a Music Video appeared first on Best Classic Bands.
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
8 w

New Cyberpunk 2077 update officially coming soon, as CDPR confirms version 2.3
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New Cyberpunk 2077 update officially coming soon, as CDPR confirms version 2.3

Cyberpunk 2077 first came out almost five years ago. Its launch was notoriously rocky, with severe technical issues plaguing the game and interfering with its players' ability to enjoy one of the most highly anticipated RPGs in years. To its credit, creator CD Projekt Red (CDPR) has continued working on the game, issuing a number of patches, including an overhaul timed to launch alongside the fantastic Phantom Liberty expansion. Even now, while working on new projects like the upcoming Witcher 4, CDPR is still plugging away at Cyberpunk 2077, with news coming today that the studio's preparing another update to go live in the near future. Continue reading New Cyberpunk 2077 update officially coming soon, as CDPR confirms version 2.3 MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Cyberpunk 2077 Phantom Liberty review, Best Cyberpunk 2077 mods, Buy Cyberpunk 2077
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
8 w

Peter Doocy Notes Karine Jean-Pierre's Making a Ridiculously Massive 'Misinformation' Pivot
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Peter Doocy Notes Karine Jean-Pierre's Making a Ridiculously Massive 'Misinformation' Pivot

Peter Doocy Notes Karine Jean-Pierre's Making a Ridiculously Massive 'Misinformation' Pivot
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
8 w

Latest PS5 System Update Stealthily Fixes VRR Issue
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Latest PS5 System Update Stealthily Fixes VRR Issue

Yesterday, Sony released a minor system update for the PS5. This is the same kind of patch that we usually receive, even during the PS4 generation, which incorporates stability improvements.
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
8 w

Peter Doocy Is Having a Field Day Torching Karine Jean-Pierre's Attempts to Rewrite History
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Peter Doocy Is Having a Field Day Torching Karine Jean-Pierre's Attempts to Rewrite History

Peter Doocy Is Having a Field Day Torching Karine Jean-Pierre's Attempts to Rewrite History
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
8 w

iPhone 17 Air fast charging sounds incredible, but how fast will it be?
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bgr.com

iPhone 17 Air fast charging sounds incredible, but how fast will it be?

The nature of my job made me look at battery life and charging speeds for years, but I would have done it as a consumer anyway. I’m a longtime iPhone user, and battery life is very important to me. I suffer from the same battery anxiety as most smartphone buyers, though I’m trying to manage it. Apple significantly improved battery life with the iPhone 16 series, and I’ve enjoyed using the iPhone 16 Plus and 16 Pro Max for several months at a time. Battery life and charging speeds haven’t been a concern. Then again, battery life was already great on older, larger iPhone models, so I expected the iPhone 16 Plus and 16 Pro Max to deliver. The battery upgrades Apple brought to the smaller iPhone 16 variants, including the iPhone 16e, gave me hope that the iPhone 17 Air won’t trigger my battery anxiety. I’m already excited about the ultra-slim iPhone 17 Air, even though I know there will be trade-offs. Battery life is one of them. A thin handset means a thinner battery, so I might have to charge the iPhone 17 Air more often. But what if Apple gave the iPhone 17 a huge upgrade in wireless charging speeds? What if those speeds went up to 50W? Continue reading... The post iPhone 17 Air fast charging sounds incredible, but how fast will it be? appeared first on BGR. Today's Top Deals Today’s deals: $299 Apple Watch Series 10, $38 Sony portable speaker, $249 DJI Mini 4K drone, more Today’s deals: Nintendo Switch games, $5 smart plugs, $150 Vizio soundbar, $100 Beats Pill speaker, more Best Ring Video Doorbell deals Today’s deals: $15 Amazon credit, rare PS5 Pro sale, $263 HP Stream laptop, $298 Sony XM5 headphones, more
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