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Trump meets with Syria’s new leader, a former Islamist militant, after announcing sanctions to be lifted

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President Trump met Wednesday in Saudi Arabia with Syria’s interim president, Ahmad al-Sharaa, highlighting the stunning reversal in fortunes for a former Islamist militant with ties to al Qaeda who spent years with a U.S. government bounty on his head. Al-Sharaa’s rebel forces led the charge on Damascus last year that toppled the decades-long, iron-fisted rule of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad, and he has since installed himself as the head of a government presenting itself to the world as inclusive and democratic.

Mr. Trump’s decision to meet with al-Sharaa, after some European leaders have done the same, could be a huge boost to the new Syrian government as it tries to rebuild ties with the Western world. Those relationships have been marked by blistering sanctions and acrimony during and after the Middle Eastern nation’s bloody civil war, which started in 2011.

In a readout on the two leaders’ meeting in Saudi Arabia, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Mr. Trump had told the Syrian leader that “he has a tremendous opportunity to do something historic in his country,” and urged him to join Saudi Arabia in signing onto the U.S.-backed Abraham Accords, to normalize ties with Israel.

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A photo released on May 14, 2025, by the state-run Saudi Press Agency shows, from left, President Trump, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman and Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, during a meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 

Saudi Press Agency/Handout/REUTERS


Mr. Trump also told al-Sharaa he should “tell all foreign terrorists to leave Syria; Deport Palestinian terrorists; help the United States to prevent the resurgence of ISIS,” and “assume responsibility for ISIS detention centers in Northeast Syria,” according to Leavitt.

They were joined in their meeting by the host of Mr. Trump’s visit to Saudi Arabia, de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, known as MBS, and on the phone by the President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The meeting came a day after Mr. Trump announced on his visit to the Saudi capital Riyadh that his administration would lift U.S. sanctions on Syria, “to give them a chance at greatness.”

“The sanctions were brutal and crippling, and served … an important function, nevertheless, at the time, but now it’s their [Syrians’] time to shine,” Mr. Trump said in a speech on Tuesday. “I say good luck, Syria. Show us something very special.”

In her readout on Wednesday, Leavitt said “President Erdogan praised President Trump for lifting sanctions on Syria and committed to working alongside Saudi Arabia to encourage peace and prosperity in Syria. The Crown Prince also commended President Trump for his decision to lift the sanctions, calling it courageous.”

She said Al-Sharaa had thanked Mr. Trump, along with MBS and Erdogan, “for their efforts to put together the meeting, and recognized the significant opportunity presented by the Iranians leaving Syria, as well as shared U.S.-Syrian interests in countering terrorism and eliminating chemical weapons.”

The “Iranians” referred to by the White House appeared to be a reference to the ousted Assad regime’s backers in Tehran.

“President Al-Sharaa concluded with his hope that Syria would serve as a critical link in facilitating trade between east and west, and invited American companies to invest in Syrian oil and gas,” Leavitt said.

The White House said Tuesday that Secretary of State Marco Rubio would also meet with the Syrian foreign minister in Turkey later this week. 

Mr. Trump became on Wednesday the first U.S. president to meet with a Syrian leader since Bill Clinton met with Assad’s father Hafez al-Assad.

A former insurgent, Sharaa ascended to power last year as Assad’s government rapidly crumbled in the span of several days — bringing an abrupt end to the more than decade-long civil war that devastated Syria. 

Sharaa previously led Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, an Islamist rebel group that fought the Assad regime and had its roots in the al-Qaeda-allied Nusra Front. Sharaa also participated in the insurgency against U.S. forces in Iraq in the 2000s.

Until last year, the U.S. had a $10 million bounty on Sharaa due to his leadership of HTS, which is designated by the U.S. as a foreign terrorist organization.

Despite the collapse of Assad’s government, many of the intense U.S. sanctions placed on Syria during the last 13 years of Assad’s reign have remained in place. The Trump administration appears to be pushing for normalized relations with the new government in Syria in the hope it can help curb Iranian influence in the country and the wider Middle East, despite Sharaa’s roots in extremism.

Saudi Arabia has also started building a relationship with Sharaa’s government, a move that could also be aimed at limiting the influence of the kingdom’s archrival Iran, which along with Russia, aided Assad in his fight against rebels during the civil war.

Key U.S. ally Israel has been more wary of Sharaa, however, and has continued airstrikes against targets inside Syria — angering Sharaa’s government.

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham urged caution and said the White House should go through the proper congressional channels in to ease sanctions against Syria. Graham arrived in Turkey on Tuesday to meet with U.S. and Turkish officials about the situation in Syria.

“I am very inclined to support sanctions relief for Syria under the right conditions,” Graham said in a statement. “However, we must remember that the current leadership in Syria achieved its position through force of arms, not through the will of its people. I know the Trump administration has provided guidance to Syrian officials about conditions that need to be met before any sanctions can be relieved.”

Graham said he was “certain that Congress would need to be informed of changes in conditions placed on Syria and how they have met those conditions before Congress can make an informed decision on whether or not it should approve the change in designation.” He also said Israeli officials were “extremely concerned” about the “state of play in Syria.”

“Waiving congressionally passed sanctions is a complicated process,” Graham said. “While I would like to empower the new players in Syria, it has to be done in a coordinated fashion with our allies — especially our friends in Israel — so that numerous security concerns can be addressed.”

Mr. Trump was in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday for the first stop of his four-day trip to the Middle East. It is the first foreign trip of Mr. Trump’s second term. It will include stops in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates later this week.

The president delivered remarks at a U.S.-Saudi investment summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia’s capital, as the White House announced a $600 billion investment from Saudi Arabia, including what it touted as the “largest defense sales agreement in history.”



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Newark Mayor Ras Baraka arrested for trespass at ICE NJ center


Mayor Ras Baraka of Newark speaks to the press near ICE agents at a demonstration outside an immigrant detention centre in Elizabeth, New Jersey May 7, 2025.

Timothy A. Clary | AFP | Getty Images

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested Friday by federal authorities for allegedly trespassing at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in his city.

Baraka was led away in handcuffs some time after demanding to be let through a security gate at the Delaney Hall ICE facility, where a group of protesters and several members of the state’s congressional caucus were gathered.

The Democrat’s administration had filed a lawsuit in late March seeking to block the opening of the detention facility, arguing that its operators failed to obtain the proper permits and violated city code.

Interim U.S Attorney for New Jersey Alina Habba said Friday that Baraka “committed trespass and ignored multiple warnings” from Department of Homeland Security officials who told him to leave the facility.

“He has willingly chosen to disregard the law. That will not stand in this state. He has been taken into custody,” Habba, a former defense attorney for President Donald Trump, wrote on X.

But Rep. LaMonica McIver, D-N.J., who witnessed the arrest, said that Baraka “did nothing wrong.”

Baraka, who is running for governor of New Jersey, was released without bond Friday evening after appearing via videoconference before a federal magistrate. He was charged with a single misdemeanor count of trespassing.

The mayor is scheduled to appear next Thursday in Newark Federal District Court for a preliminary hearing.

Baraka, during an interview with Jen Psaki on MSNBC., said, “They charged me, I guess, based on the charge that they can find.”

“We was actually allowed on the property in the first place,” Baraka said.

“You know, nothing happened for a long, long time. It, you know, for at least over an hour. And then, you know, after they finally told us to leave, and I told him I was leaving, they came outside the gate and arrested me,” he said.

“They obviously targeted me,” Baraka said. “I wasn’t the only one out there. They came directly to me and tried to arrest me.”

Mayor Ras Baraka of Newark in handcuffs outside Delaney Hall detention facility in Newark, NJ on May 9, 2025.

Courtesy: Newark Mayor’s Office

McIver, in remarks to reporters after the incident, said that Baraka went inside the gate at Delaney Hall, and told officers that “he was waiting for us to come out because we were conducting an oversight visit.” Two other U.S. House Democrats from New Jersey, Bonnie Watson Coleman and Rob Menendez, were also at the facility at the time.

“They asked him to leave. He left, out of the gate,” McIver said.

ICE officers “then came out to have a huddle” and decided that Baraka “should be arrested still because he was inside,” she said.

They then arrested the mayor, “who had already left off of their property from behind the gate,” the lawmaker said.

“What we see here is despicable, and we should all be angry.”

A video posted on X by News12NJ reporter Amanda Lee shows a physical altercation between law enforcement officers and apparent protesters by a security gate at the facility.

A spokesperson for Watson Coleman told NBC News that the three House members “were escorted in” to Delaney Hall “after a period of explaining the law to the officials at the site.”

The lawmakers said they were there to conduct oversight on the facility in light of reporting about other ICE centers, which have become political flashpoints amid Trump’s aggressive deportation efforts.

But Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin, in a statement to NBC, called the incident “a bizarre political stunt” by a group of protesters that included elected officials.

The group “stormed the gate and broke into the detention facility” as a busload of detainees entered a security gate, McLaughlin said.

The protesters “holed up in a guard shack, the first security check point,” she said.

“Had these members requested a tour, we would have facilitated a tour of the facility. This is an evolving situation,” she added.

Watson Coleman rejected that characterization.

“Contrary to a press statement put out by DHS we did not ‘storm’ the detention center,” Watson Coleman said.

She called the DHS spokeswoman “unfamiliar with the facts,” noting that McLaughlin’s statement incorrectly claimed there were only two House members at the facility.

Baraka’s arrest was swiftly condemned by Democratic politicians and advocacy groups.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said he was “outraged,” and called for Baraka’s immediate release.

Murad Awawdeh, president of the New York Immigration Coalition, called the arrest a “reckless and irresponsible” reaction to the elected officials’ oversight efforts.

“We demand the immediate release of Mayor Baraka, and for those responsible for this decision to be held accountable,” Awawdeh said.



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‘Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli are big shoes to fill’: Former England seamer James Anderson | Cricket News


'Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli are big shoes to fill': Former England seamer James Anderson
Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli (Getty Images)

England fast bowling legend James Anderson has praised Virat Kohli as one of the greatest Test batters ever while addressing the recent retirements of both Kohli and Rohit Sharma from Test cricket. Anderson, 42, believes India has enough talent to fill the void left by these departures ahead of their upcoming five-Test tour of England.Kohli announced his retirement from Test cricket on Monday, ending his career as India’s fourth-highest run-scorer in the format. This decision came shortly after his teammate and captain Rohit Sharma also stepped away from Test cricket.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!“Great players. There will be a new captain because Sharma has retired. Kohli, one of the greatest Test batters that’s ever been. There’s big shoes to fill there but they’ve got a huge amount of talent in their squad,” Anderson said on TalkSport.

Virat Kohli retires from Test cricket after 14 years

The English paceman highlighted India’s talent pool, particularly noting the impact of IPL players transitioning to Test cricket.“You just have to watch the IPL. They are bringing players into Test cricket from the IPL now who are just so attacking, aggressive, and fearless,” Anderson stated.Anderson and Kohli shared a notable rivalry spanning over a decade in Test cricket, particularly during India’s tours of England. Their contests saw dramatic shifts, with Anderson dominating Kohli in 2014, followed by Kohli’s remarkable comeback in 2018 when he scored nearly 600 runs.

Virat Kohli was always a VIBE during India’s practice sessions

Anderson cautioned against England focusing too much on the upcoming Ashes series while overlooking the challenge posed by India.“It’s a huge year with the Ashes coming but it is important to get some momentum going. If I’m being honest, looking back at my career, that happened too much where, 18 months out from an Ashes the management and even the players starting to look towards that and actually forgetting what’s in front of you. India is going to be such a tough challenge even at home. They are a strong side,” Anderson said.The five-Test series between India and England is scheduled to begin in just over a month, marking India’s first Test series without both Kohli and Rohit in their lineup.


Get IPL 2025 match schedules, squads, points table, and live scores for CSK, MI, RCB, KKR, SRH, LSG, DC, GT, PBKS, and RR. Check the latest IPL Orange Cap and Purple Cap standings.





Omaha elects its first Democrat mayor since 2013 as longtime Republican ousted

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Democrat challenger John Ewing defeated incumbent Republican Omaha mayor Jean Stothert in a victory that the Democratic Party is describing as an indictment against the Trump administration and the GOP. 

Ewing, who is currently the treasurer of Douglas County, will make history by becoming the first Black mayor of Nebraska’s largest city, while Stothert was denied a fourth term. 

“I called John Ewing and I congratulated him. John Ewing is inheriting tonight a great city, and we leave a strong foundation for the city that we all love. We are proud, are grateful and we are hopeful,” Stothert said in her concession speech. 

The race between Stothert and Ewing primarily revolved around local issues like street repairs and garbage service, but in the final stretch the campaign touched on more national, hot-button issues such as President Donald Trump’s administration and transgender rights. 

JAMES CARVILLE WARNS DEMOCRATS AGAINST USING ALIENATING LEFTIST WORDS LIKE ‘EQUITY’ AND ‘INTERSECTIONALITY’ 

John Ewing, Omaha mayoral candidate

John Ewing, Omaha mayoral candidate, shakes hands with Amy Richardson while discussing neighborhood improvements in the Joslyn Castle neighborhood on May 8 in Omaha, Neb.  (Megan Nielsen/Omaha World-Herald via AP)

Although the mayor’s office is nonpartisan, the candidates made it clear to voters that Stothert is a Republican and Ewing is a Democrat. 

One Stothert TV ad said “Ewing stands with radicals who want to allow boys in girls’ sports,” according to the Associated Press. 

Meanwhile, Ewing aired ads that connect Stothert to the Trump administration, showing the mayor on a split screen with Trump and saying “Let’s say no to the chaos and elect a mayor who will actually get things done.” 

In the latest results from WOWT, Ewing was leading Stothert in the vote count by 48,693 to 37,758. 

DAVID HOGG SLAMS ‘FAST-TRACK’ EFFORT TO OUST HIM AS DNC VICE CHAIR 

Omaha Mayor Jean Stothert

Omaha Mayor Jean Stothert talks to the press after dropping off her ballot in front of City Hall on Friday, May 9.  (Nikos Frazier/Omaha World-Herald via AP)

The Democratic Party said with Ewing’s win, “Democrats further extend a significant streak of overperformances and victories in elections in 2025. 

“From the school board to city council, and now to the mayor’s office, Nebraska voters are making their message heard loud and clear: They want strong Democratic leaders who will fight for them, protect their rights, and build opportunities within their communities. As Trump and his MAGA Republican allies continue to fail working families at every turn, voters are channeling their frustration into action at the voting booth,” the Democratic Party said in a statement. 

Voters in Nebraska

Voters are seen casting ballots at Beveridge Middle School on Tuesday, May 13, 2025, in Omaha, Neb.  (Nikos Frazier/Omaha World-Herald via AP)

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“After tonight, vulnerable House Republicans like Don Bacon are on notice,” added DNC Chair Ken Martin. “Voters are sick of cowardly Republicans willing to bend the knee to Trump at their expense. They want true leaders who will govern on behalf of working families and not billionaire donors, which is why Democrats like John Ewing Jr. are winning elections up and down the ballot.”  

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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A radar clocked someone going nearly double the speed limit. It turned out to be a duck — and a “repeat offender.”

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A radar image of a speed offender caught in central Switzerland last month revealed that the culprit was not only a duck, but likely a “repeat offender,” local authorities said.  

Police in the town of Koniz, near the capital Bern, were astounded when they went through radar images snapped on April 13 to discover that a mallard was among those caught in the speed trap, the municipality said on its Facebook page over the weekend.

The duck was caught going 52 kilometers per hour (32 mph) in a 30-km zone, the post said, along with a photo of the fast fowl.

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Police say the duck was likely a repeat offender after being snapped in the same spot in 2018.

Facebook / Gemeinde Köniz


The story, first reported by the Berner Zeitung newspaper on Monday, got even stranger.

It turned out that a similar-looking duck was captured flying in the same spot at exactly the same speed, on exactly the same date seven years earlier, the Facebook post said. Officials called the duck a “notorious racer and repeat offender.”

The municipality said it had considered whether the whole thing might not be a belated April Fool’s joke or a “fake” picture.

But the police inspectorate said it was impossible to doctor images or manipulate the radar system.

The computers are calibrated and tested each year by Switzerland’s Federal Institute of Metrology (METAS), and the photos taken are sealed, the municipality explained.

The Facebook post concluded: “We hope you enjoy pondering curious coincidences, criminal activities of animals and the maximum flight speed of ducks.”



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Pope Leo tells cardinals they must continue ‘precious legacy’ of Pope Francis


Pope Leo XIV leads the Pro Ecclesia Mass in the Sistine Chapel, on May 09, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican.

Vatican Pool – Corbis | Corbis News | Getty Images

Pope Leo XIV signaled on Saturday he would continue with the vision and reforms of Pope Francis, telling the world’s Catholic cardinals the late pontiff left a “precious legacy” that must carry on.

In his first meeting with all the cardinals since his election as pontiff on May 8, Leo also asked the senior clerics to renew their commitment to major Church reforms enacted by the landmark Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.

Leo said Francis, who died on April 21, broadly had a vision of opening the staid 1.4-billion-member Church to the modern world, had left an “example of complete dedication to service.”

“Let us take up this precious legacy and continue on the journey,” the new pope told the cardinals.

The pontiff also asked the clerics to “renew together our complete commitment” to the reforms enacted by the Council, which included celebrating the Mass in local languages rather than Latin and pursuing dialogue with other religions.

He cited Francis’ focus on “courageous and trusting dialogue with the contemporary world in its various components and realities.”

Francis was pope for 12 years and often garnered criticism from conservative cardinals, who said he was watering down the Church’s doctrine on issues such as inclusion of LGBT Catholics and women’s leadership.

Leo, the former U.S. Cardinal Robert Prevost, was a relative unknown on the global stage before his election as pontiff. He had spent most of his career as a missionary in Peru before serving as a senior Vatican official for the past two years.

The new pope said on Saturday he had taken his papal name partly to honor Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903), who was known as an advocate for social justice and pushed for fair pay and treatment of workers during the industrial revolution.

Leo XIV said the Church must now take the lead in facing newer threats to workers, such as artificial intelligence. He said AI posed “new challenges for the defence of human dignity, justice and labour.”

Leo’s two-hour meeting with the cardinals took a different format to that used by previous popes, who would typically offer a speech and expect the clerics only to listen.

This time, Leo gave a prepared address and then opened the floor to any cardinal who wanted to make a comment — allowing the clerics to voice their opinions and concerns about the main issues facing the global Church.

“He listened very carefully, but he knows he’s going to have to make the decisions,” Irish Cardinal Sean Brady told Reuters. “But we’re here to help him.”

Spanish Cardinal Aquilino Bocos Merino described the meeting as “very cordial and communal.”

China deal comes up

Leo greeted each of the cardinals individually as they left the meeting, which was held in the same small Vatican auditorium where the cardinals had been gathering in the days before the conclave to discuss who should be the next pope.

Czech Cardinal Dominik Duka said one topic that came up was the situation of Catholics in communist China.

The Vatican and China in 2018 signed a controversial deal on the appointment of bishops in the country, which gives Beijing some input into their selection.

Conservatives have attacked the still-secret deal as a sell-out, but Duka told Reuters it was necessary to keep a dialogue open in places where the Church is oppressed, comparing it to dialogue between the Vatican and eastern European countries during the Cold War.

German Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, who openly clashed with Francis on issues concerning Catholic moral teaching, told Reuters that Saturday’s encounter was “very good and harmonious.”

To be elected as pope during the May 7-8 secret conclave at the Sistine Chapel, Leo required a two-thirds majority of 89 of the 133 voting cardinals.

Madagascar Cardinal Désiré Tsarahazana told Reuters that Leo received more than 100 votes at the final ballot on the afternoon of May 8.



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‘No DJs, no dancing girls’: Sunil Gavaskar urges BCCI as IPL resumes May 17 amid tense backdrop | Cricket News


'No DJs, no dancing girls': Sunil Gavaskar urges BCCI as IPL resumes May 17 amid tense backdrop
Sunil Gavaskar (Getty Images)

NEW DELHI: The Indian Premier League (IPL) 2025 is set to resume on May 17 after a week-long suspension triggered by escalating tensions between India and Pakistan. Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) will host defending champions Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium in the first match of the resumption.As cricket returns, former India captain Sunil Gavaskar has called for a subdued atmosphere in the remaining matches to honour the sentiments of grieving families following recent terror attacks in Kashmir. Gavaskar’s appeal comes in the wake of ‘Operation Sindoor’, a retaliatory Indian military strike against terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir after a deadly attack in Pahalgam.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!Speaking to Sports Today, Gavaskar said: “I would sincerely hope, because of what has happened and some families have lost their near and dear ones, there is no music. Let’s not have the DJs screaming in the middle of an over.”Who’s that IPL player?He added, “Let the games be played. Let the crowds come in. But just cricket — no dancing girls, nothing. That would be a really nice way to respect the sentiment of the families.”

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Do you agree with Sunil Gavaskar’s call for a subdued atmosphere during IPL matches?

Gavaskar also endorsed the one-week suspension of the tournament, stating, “With hostilities, there was no place for sport. But now that there is a ceasefire, the tournament can resume.”

Bombay Sport Exchange Ep 5: Shane Watson on IPL, India-Australia rivalry | Part 1

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) released the revised IPL schedule on Monday night. A total of 17 matches will be played across six venues, culminating in the final on June 3.


Get IPL 2025 match schedules, squads, points table, and live scores for CSK, MI, RCB, KKR, SRH, LSG, DC, GT, PBKS, and RR. Check the latest IPL Orange Cap and Purple Cap standings.





Wisconsin judge Hannah Dugan indicted on accusations she helped a migrant avoid ICE agents

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A Milwaukee County Circuit Court judge has been indicted after being accused of helping an undocumented migrant flee arrest at her courthouse last month as President Donald Trump’s illegal immigration crackdown continues.

Judge Hannah Dugan, 66, was indicted Tuesday in federal court with obstructing or impeding a proceeding and concealing an individual to prevent his discovery and arrest, the former charge a felony and the latter a misdemeanor.

The two charges carry a maximum penalty of six years in prison and a $350,000 fine.

Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan. She has been indicted on accusation of helping an undocumented migrant flee a courthouse.

Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan. She has been indicted on accusation of helping an undocumented migrant flee a courthouse. (Lee Matz/Milwaukee Independent/AP)

She is expected to enter a plea at her next hearing set for Thursday.

Members of her defense team said in a short statement responding to the charges: “As she said after her unnecessary arrest, Judge Dugan asserts her innocence and looks forward to being vindicated in court.”

According to an affidavit filed by an FBI agent, the incident in question took place at the Milwaukee County Courthouse on April 18 when Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, 30, was expected to answer state-level misdemeanor charges of battery related to domestic violence.

When Dugan was informed by her clerk Alan Freed Jr that a group of six Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents had arrived with the intention of arresting and deporting Flores-Ruiz, alleging that he had entered the United States from Mexico illegally in 2013, she became “visibly angry” and called the situation “absurd,” the affidavit states.

It goes on to allege that she told the agents, with a “confrontational, angry demeanor,” that their administrative warrant was insufficient and that they would instead need a judicial warrant, signed by a judge, directing them to follow fellow justice Kristela Cervera to County Chief Judge Carl Ashley’s office to take up the matter.

When all but one of the agents departed, the judge allegedly directed Flores-Ruiz and his then-attorney Mercedes de la Rosa to exit the building via its non-public jury door, telling the defendant he could participate in his scheduled hearing on Zoom at a later date.

Supporters of Jugan hold a rally shortly after her arrest last month.

Supporters of Jugan hold a rally shortly after her arrest last month. (Lee Matz/Milwaukee Independent/AP)

After realizing what had happened, the remaining ICE agent and a colleague subsequently chased Flores-Ruiz and apprehended him at West State Street and North 10th Street downtown. He is currently being held at Ozaukee County Jail.

Federal authorities then returned a week later to arrest Dugan at the courthouse, an operation trumpeted on social media by FBI Director Kash Patel who shared a picture of her in handcuffs, seeking to deter others from following her example.

Dugan was suspended by the state Supreme Court and replaced by a reserve judge after her arrest.

ICE has attempted a number of arrests at Wisconsin courthouses, as well as others in Virginia, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts, inviting pushback.

“When federal immigration enforcement takes place in our courthouse complex, it sends families into hiding, deters survivors of violence from seeking protection and discourages tenants from asserting their rights,” Milwaukee County Board Chair Marcelia Nicholson said prior to Dugan’s arrest.

The county’s Board of Supervisors subsequently approved a non-binding resolution stating that it “stands firm in its opposition to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement operating outside the limits of the law in and around the Milwaukee County Courthouse Complex.”



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