Dave Bondy
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September 15, 2024
Secret Service statement on Trump protection

🚹 JUST IN: When asked why Trump did not have Secret Service protection surrounding the golf course, officials said:

“He is not the sitting President.”

00:00:35
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September 15, 2024
Trump not a fan of Taylor Swift

Trump not a fan of Taylor Swift

00:00:19
September 13, 2024
Flint Man's Truck Stolen with Nephew’s Ashes Inside

Flint Man's Truck Stolen with Nephew’s Ashes Inside

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September 08, 2024
🚹 NEW: An illegal alien pretending to be a cop ABDUCTED a young girl while she was walking to school.

🚹 NEW: An illegal alien pretending to be a cop ABDUCTED a young girl while she was walking to school in Virginia

INFURIATING.

The suspect is a Peruvian illegal who was caught and RELEASED into the U.S. last December by the Biden Harris regime,

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News they don't want you to see
Wednesday September 18, 2024

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Some viewers of ABC’s World News Tonight with David Muir are apparently unhappy with how the presidential debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris played out on the network.

During the event on September 10, Muir and co-moderator Linsey Davis fact-checked Trump several times, but they failed to pounce on Harris with corrections, Fox News reported on Tuesday.

Numerous conservatives have suggested that the debate was not fair, which has reportedly cost the network. The outlet continued:

Muir’s “World News Tonight” averaged 6.7 million viewers on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, the three episodes following the debate, after averaging 7.6 million in 2024 leading up to the debate.

The 12% drop in viewers for “World News Tonight” is more significant than slight declines “CBS Evening News” and “NBC Nightly News” saw when comparing the three episodes following ABC’s debate to the year-to-date totals, although Muir’s newscast remained the No. 1 broadcast evening newscast.

Click here to read more.

 

STARK COUNTY, Ohio (Gray News) - A 27-year-old woman was arrested by police in Ohio for allegedly killing a cat and eating the animal.

According to court records filed in Stark County, Allexis Telia Ferrell, of Canton, is charged with injuring animals, prohibitions concerning companion animals and disorderly conduct.

Investigators with the Canton Police Department said Ferrell killed the cat by stomping on its head. She then went on to eat the cat “in a residential area in front of multiple people” at a housing complex on 13th Street SE.

Ferrell was arrested on Aug. 16 at around 11 p.m.

The initial bond was set at $100,000 during Ferrell’s arraignment on Monday, according to court documents.

Ferrell is scheduled to return to court again on Aug. 26. Click here to read more.

 

McALLEN, Texas — Two U.S. Border Patrol sectors in South Texas had slight increases in migrant encounters in August from July, but still are way down from the huge numbers they’ve had in the past and at the end of 2023, according to new data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

In August, Border Patrol agents in the Rio Grande Valley Sector encountered 5,244 migrants, which was up 4% from 5,032 in July. That’s down 71% from 18,216 in December.

Border Patrol agents in the Del Rio Sector encountered 7,666 migrants in August, which was up 6% from 7,236 in July, but still down 89% from 71,050 in December, CBP reports. Click here to read more.

 

PULASKI COUNTY, Ark. – A man from Honduras living in Arkansas illegally faces several charges including negligent homicide and driving under the influence in connection with a deadly crash in Pulaski County.

According to Arkansas State Police, 30-year-old Maynor Yair Sorto-Herrera was arrested on Sept. 9 in connection with a crash that killed 48-year-old Jennifer Ann Morton of Little Rock near Arch Street.

ASP officials said that Herrera was driving a truck south on Arch Street on the morning of Sept. 8 when his vehicle crossed into the northbound lane, striking Morton’s car.

Special agents said that Herrera was found walking away from the scene and taken to a local hospital for treatment for his injuries. He was later taken to the Pulaski County Regional Detention Facility, ASP officials said. Click here to read more.

 

VOLUSIA COUNTY, Fla. — Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood followed through on a promise to publicly release a mug shot and “perp walk” video of an 11-year-old student arrested for making a school shooting threat, First Coast News reported.

“Because you don’t want to raise your kid, so Sheriff Chitwood’s going to raise them,” the sheriff said.

The student, from a Port Orange middle school, was taken into custody after allegedly creating a written list of names and targets. Although the child claimed it was a joke, the sheriff’s office took the threat seriously, recovering airsoft rifles, pistols, fake ammunition, knives and swords that the student had shown off to others in a video, according to the report.

The sheriff’s office published a video showing the student being led in handcuffs from a patrol vehicle into the police station, where he was processed before being placed in a holding cell. Click here to read more.

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September 17, 2024
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News they don't want you to see
Tuesday September 17, 2024

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LANSING, Mich - The 2025 state budget spends $200,000 on traffic control at the Michigan International Speedway, and a prominent policy advocate is waving a red flag.

“Those dollars are headed in the wrong direction,” John Mozena, president of the Center for Economic Accountability, told Michigan Capitol Confidential in an email. “It should be NASCAR compensating taxpayers for the costs its races are imposing on the surrounding community, not the other way around.”

When fans leave the speedway, state police provide traffic control services. Attendees pay admission fees, but Michigan taxpayers foot the bill for traffic control for up to 125,000 people leaving the track.

The events turn a quiet rural area into a giant traffic jam, Mozena said, and the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing should bear the cost for traffic control. Click here to read more.

 

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WEST PALM BEACH, FLA - Ryan Wesley Routh was charged on Monday with two federal gun crimes in connection with his alleged assassination attempt on former president Donald Trump one day earlier.

But Routh’s interactions with authorities — and reporters — began long before he was taken into custody on Sunday after the barrel of his rifle was spotted sticking out from a bush at Trump’s West Palm Beach golf club.

Routh, who is likely to face additional charges as federal prosecutors seek an indictment, has a long history of run-ins with police.

But after years spent developing a rap sheet — that included involvement in an armed standoff with police after a traffic stop in 2002 and other lesser offenses — Routh rebranded himself as a Ukrainian resistance fighter who was taken seriously by reporters, sitting for interviews with several major media outlets the past two years, including the New York Times, Semafor, and Newsweek. Click here to read more.

 

OXFORD, Mass. - A Massachusetts teen is proving hard work and some free time after school pays off big.

The Cordova family says their 16-year-old son Dylan is already cruising toward a successful future.

Dylan’s new Jeep Wrangler is everything he dreamed of.

But in order to get his new set of wheels, he put in a lot of hours behind another set of wheels.

It all began in 2020 during the pandemic. Dylan was only 12 years old.

“You’re just sitting at home playing Fortnite and I wanted to save up because I wanted a Jeep. I see everyone driving a Jeep, having fun,” Dylan described. “My dad came from Guatemala, so he started working really young, too. So, I kind of wanted to follow in his footsteps.”

“I always tell them, ‘Work hard. Work for your goals because nothing comes easy. Nothing is free, especially in these times.’ You know?” Dylan’s father, Samuel Cordova said. “Everything is so expensive. I tell them, ‘Do the best you can.’” Click here to read more.

If anyone is in Mid-Michigan and needs a furnace tune up. Click here to learn more about my friends at Bigfoot Pro Services.

 

WASHINGTON D.C. - The Educational Choice for Children Act of 2024 becomes the first nationwide school choice bill to pass out of committee in U.S. history. Now it goes to the U.S. House floor, giving hope to Illinois families denied the option by state lawmakers.

For the first time in U.S. history, a federal school choice bill has passed out of committee and advanced to the U.S. House floor – a hopeful move for 15,000 low-income Illinois students whose scholarships were taken away by state lawmakers.

The U.S. House Committee on Ways and Means passed H.R. 9462, or the Educational Choice for Children Act of 2024, aimed to “help end the skilled labor shortage and expand educational scholarships for low-income families and students.” It passed the committee by a vote of 23-16 on Sept. 11. Click here to read more.

 

AUSTIN, TX - Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday declared the Venezuelan gang, Tren De Aragua (TDA) as a foreign terrorist organization. Texas Department of Public Safety is aggressively targeting gang members who were released into country by Biden administration, he said.

“I will not allow them to use Texas as a base of operations to terrorize our citizens,” Abbott said at a news conference in Houston. “Texas is a law and order state and I will ensure that law enforcement has every tool they need to keep our community safe.”

Tren De Aragua is characterized as “MS13 on steroids,” Abbott said, referring to a violent El Salvadoran gang. It’s “the largest criminal organization in Venezuela 
 that has now expanded to a transnational criminal organization 
 dominating the international flow of migrants from South America through Mexico into the United States.” Click here to read more.

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September 16, 2024
News they don't want you to see
Monday September 16, 2024

I made a bold choice to leave my 25-year career in mainstream media to bring you real, unfiltered stories. I do this because I believe in transparency, truth, and keeping journalism alive for the people. But I can’t do it alone. I need your help. Subscribe for $5 a month. You can quit at anytime.

 

 

 

 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The Florida Department of Health this week advised against using mRNA COVID-19 vaccines heading into the fall and winter, typically a season with an uptick in respiratory illness.

The department said that for those 65 and older with underlying health conditions concerned about COVID-19, providers should “prioritize patient access to non-mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and treatment.”

Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo said in the new guidance that Floridians should prioritize being active, minimize processed foods, prioritize vegetables and healthy fats, and to spend time outdoors to improve vitamin D levels.

Despite the approval, the Florida Health Department expressed concern over the “lack” of clinical trial data specific to newly-approved COVID-19 boosters. Click here to read more.

 

Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas, who previously supported defunding police efforts, is now pushing to "increase patrols in areas reeling from ongoing criminal behavior" after the deadly shooting of a popular chef left the community reeling.

Shaun Brady, a 44-year-old Irish immigrant, was shot dead outside the restaurant he owned Aug. 28 just after 5 p.m, police said.

"Preliminary investigation revealed the victim was taking out trash when he observed multiple subjects by a vehicle," Kansas City Police told Fox News Digital. "An interaction between the victim and subjects occurred that led to the victim being shot."

"Like many in our community, I am heartbroken to learn of the death of Shaun Brady. I have met him, laughed with him, heard just a bit of his and his family's story and was inspired by the business and the community he was building in Kansas City. I grieve for and express my sincerest condolences to his family and all who knew him," Lucas said in a statement.  Click here to read more.

 

 EL PASO, TX - It started in a prison in the Venezuelan state of Aragua nearly a decade ago. Now, the gang known as “Tren de Aragua” (TDA) has expanded into what the Justice Department calls a “transnational criminal organization” with branches in most of the Western Hemisphere.

TDA figures in more than 100 police investigations around the U.S., including Texas, New York, Colorado and Wisconsin. And, according to reports, its leaders have given members the green light to open fire on U.S. law enforcement.

“This TDA is a very special threat,” said former New York State Homeland Security adviser Michael Balboni. “They’ve created a transnational drug pipeline,” he told NewsNation.

The gang has also been called “MS-13 on steroids,” invoking the name of the notorious gang formed by Salvadoran immigrants in Los Angeles in the 1980s. Click here to read more.

 

WEST PALM BEACH, FLA - The alleged would-be Trump assassin on Sunday stood 300-500 yards away from the former president with scoped rifle, authorities said.

“How far away was the president when this gentleman was caught,” reporters asked authorities during a press conference on Sunday.

“Probably between 300-500 yards,” said Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw. “But with a rifle and a scope like that, that’s not a long distance.”

As many as four to six shots were fired by the Secret Service. It remains unknown if the would-be assailant returned fire.

As to why the would-be assassin was able to get that close to the former president despite a previous assassination attempt on him in June, the authorities said that the security perimeter could only be so wide due to him being a presidential candidate as opposed to a sitting president. Click here to read more.

 

LANSING, Mich - Seven Michigan public school districts, the recipients of the first electric school buses in the state, reported mixed but mostly positive experiences about the vehicles since adopting them five years ago.

The Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy released summaries of feedback on electric buses’ real-world performance, coming from public school districts in Ann Arbor, Gaylord, Kalamazoo, Oxford, Roseville, Three Rivers and Zeeland.

Within the past two years alone, Michigan has directed more than $239 million in federal and state taxpayer dollars to electric school bus infrastructure.

One of the biggest initial concerns – electric bus performance in cold weather – proved manageable in each district, with four of the seven districts reporting no problems at all. 

“They handle great in all types of weather,” one district told EGLE, which did not identify district names in its releases of the quotes. “Overall, they are a great bus to have in the fleet. Would like a few more to add for in-town routes. There is no noise inside the bus – no engine noise. Students really like the overall atmosphere of the bus.” Click here to learn more.

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