Â


Michigan property owner gets texted $11.2 million land sale offer for data center development
A Michigan property owner was allegedly offered $11.2 million for their land to be used in data center development, according to a social media post by Republican gubernatorial candidate Tom Leonard.
Leonard posted a screenshot of a text on X that he says was sent to his unnamed friend, who’s the property owner. The offer amounted to $70,000 an acre.
“This isn’t a joke! A friend of mine was offered $70,000 an acre for her farm by a data center company. $11.2 million! This is what big tech is doing in Michigan,” he said in the post.
According to the screenshot, the individual who made the offer said they were “interested in purchasing some of your land in MI” and could “get aggressive on price.”
The property owner then said “it’s not for sale.” Click here to read more.

ICE Officer Who Fatally Shot Woman In Minneapolis Suffered Internal Bleeding
CBS News reported that “two U.S. officials” told the outlet that the ICE officer, Jonathan Ross, “suffered internal bleeding to the torso.”
“The ICE agent who fatally shot Renee Good on Jan. 7 in Minneapolis, Jonathan Ross, suffered internal bleeding to the torso following the incident, according to two U.S. officials briefed on his medical condition,” CBS News wrote in a post on X.
Breitbart News’s AWR Hawkins reported on January 7 that at the time of shooting, “a group of people began trying to block ICE agents” who were conducting immigration operations, and that a woman — identified as Renee Good, allegedly “weaponized her vehicle” to attack ICE officials. Click here to read more.
A Father’s Quest for Justice Finds Resolution After 13 Years
Craig Stingley had no legal training, no big-name lawyer or civil rights advocate by his side. Yet for 13 years, he refused to accept that the judicial system would hold no one responsible for the killing of his 16-year-old son, Corey.
The quest for justice dominated his life.
He gathered police reports, witness statements and other evidence in the Dec. 14, 2012, fatal incident inside a Milwaukee-area convenience store. The youth had tried to shoplift $12 worth of flavored malt beverages at the shop before abandoning the items and turning to leave. That’s when three men wrestled him to the ground to hold him for the police.
The medical examiner determined that he died of a brain injury from asphyxiation after a “violent struggle with multiple individuals.” The manner of death: homicide. Click here to read more.

Pro-Trans Lawyers’ 11th-Hour Supreme Court Arguments Reveal Desperation, ADF Lawyer Says
Assaults against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers are up 1,300%, vehicular attacks are up 3,200% and death threats are up 8,000%, the Department of Homeland Security said after a U.S. citizen was shot and killed during an alleged vehicular attack in Minneapolis this week.
Federal authorities argue the shooting was justified and in self-defense. Local and state officials say otherwise.
One day after the Minneapolis shooting, two Venezuelan nationals were shot by a Border Patrol agent after they attempted to run him over with their vehicle in Portland, Ore., the Department of Homeland Security said. DHS also describes the shooting as self-defense and justified.
The two Venezuelans and alleged Tren de Aragua members “weaponized their vehicle against Border Patrol in Portland. Click here to read more.

Voter Integrity Win: Supreme Court Affirms Standing To Challenge Extended Ballot Counting
In a 7-2 decision that had resounding import for election integrity, the Supreme Court reversed the lower court ruling that Congressman Michael Bost and two other candidates lacked standing to challenge the Illinois law that allows election officials to count mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day if they are received within 14 days thereafter.
Bost and the two other plaintiffs argued that the process of an “extended” counting period violates federal statutes (2 U.S.C. §7 and 3 U.S.C. §1), which establish a single “Election Day” as the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. The District Court and the Seventh Circuit dismissed the case, concluding that the petitioners lacked standing under Article III because they could not prove the rule would cause them to lose or significantly harm their campaigns.
But the Supreme Court held that a candidate for office has standing to challenge the rules governing their own election based on their unique status and interest in the process. Click here to read more.

