Counsel Jack Smith has filed a motion urging to overturn a dismissal of Trump’s classified case.

Counsel Jack Smith has filed a motion urging to overturn a dismissal of Trump’s classified case.

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Unbiased headline news – Japan scrambled fighter jets after a Chinese military aircraft violated its airspace, marking a further escalation in regional tensions. This incident occurred just weeks after the U.S. military intercepted Russian and Chinese bombers in international airspace near Alaska’s coast. The two-minute incursion by the Y-9 surveillance aircraft into Japanese airspace was the first by a Chinese military plane, according to local media reports. — Gunmen in southwestern Pakistan killed at least 31 people in two separate attacks, while security forces killed 12 insurgents, officials reported. Officials noted that this was one of the deadliest days of violence in the restive Baluchistan province, with other reports of shootings and destruction in the area. Twenty-three people were fatally shot after being identified and taken from buses and trucks in Musakhail, a district in Baluchistan, according to senior police official Ayub Achakzai. The attackers burned at least 10 vehicles before fleeing. — Two Arizona women were killed when gunmen opened fire on their vehicle in the northern Mexican state of Sonora, Mexican authorities confirmed. The victims, aged 72 and 82, originally from the Sonora city of Caborca, were found dead in an overturned, bullet-riddled white Nissan Pathfinder at about 10:30 a.m. on the Sonoyta-Caborca highway, according to a news release from the Sonora attorney general’s office. Officials have not yet provided a motive for the attack. — Special counsel Jack Smith has filed a motion urging the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn a federal judge’s unexpected dismissal of former President Donald Trump’s classified documents case. U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon last month dismissed the case against Trump, which accused him of unlawfully retaining classified documents from his White House tenure and obstructing government efforts to retrieve them. Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges. — Authorities are investigating the death of a 39-year-old woman on the first day of the Burning Man Festival in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert. Burning Man’s emergency services found the festival attendee, Kendra Frazer, unresponsive at around 11:30 a.m. Sunday, according to the Burning Man Project and Pershing County Sheriff Jerry Allen. Deputies arrived and confirmed her death, Allen stated. — A landslide in Ketchikan, Alaska, has resulted in at least one death, blocked roads, and damaged homes, officials reported. Three people were injured and taken to the hospital, according to Kacie Paxton, public information officer for the Ketchikan Gateway Borough. One of the injured was later released, she said. Mandatory evacuations were ordered after the landslide swept through several Ketchikan streets around 4 p.m. Sunday, Paxton stated. — A 24-year-old woman has been charged for allegedly jumping a fence at a New Jersey zoo and “enticing” a tiger, according to authorities. Zyair Dennis was charged with defiant trespassing and issued two city ordinances related to fence climbing at the zoo, Bridgeton police said in a statement. Dennis allegedly entered a restricted area at the Cohanzick Zoo on August 18th, police reported. They noted she was nearly injured when she “enticed” the tiger. — The federal government plans to restart its free at-home COVID tests program in September as preparations begin for the upcoming respiratory virus season. Dawn O’Connell, assistant secretary for preparedness and response at the Department of Health and Human Services, announced Friday that this will be the seventh time the Biden-Harris administration has allowed Americans to order free over-the-counter tests. It’s unclear when the website, COVID.gov/tests, will be reactivated.

Harris Receives AMAZING Economy & Stock Market News

Harris Receives AMAZING Economy & Stock Market News

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Contrary to Donald Trump’s constant gloom-and-doom ‘the world is ending’ narrative; the economy outlook is drastically improving and the Dow closes at new record high on rate cut rally. The world economy is looking good and this all revolves around the talks of a rate cut and what Biden/Harris has done to keep a recession out of reach. Donald Trump absolutely HATES when he hears good news like this.

BREAKING: Seniors are abandoning Trump by the masses

BREAKING: Seniors are abandoning Trump by the masses

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Surprising trend: Trump losing senior support rapidly and Kamala Harris is getting their votes. New reports, polls and multiple articles are showing that seniors are switching sides on Trump and this is a HUGE voting bloc for his campaign. Along with other losses and fumbles, Donald Trump cannot lose this base. He seems not to care.

A 12-foot bronze statue of the late U.S. Representative John Lewis was unveiled on Saturday

A 12-foot bronze statue of the late U.S. Representative John Lewis was unveiled on Saturday

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Unbiased headline news – Five people were killed in Ukrainian shelling in Russia’s Belgorod region, officials reported, while Russian forces targeted a hotel in eastern Ukraine, resulting in one journalist missing and two others injured. Twelve others were wounded in the Russian village of Rakitone, located 23 miles from the Ukrainian border, including a 16-year-old girl who is reportedly in critical condition, according to regional Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov. Another individual also died in a separate drone attack on the border village of Solovevka, he later wrote on social media. — Two separate bus accidents in Pakistan on Sunday, just hours apart, resulted in at least 35 deaths and left dozens more injured, officials confirmed. The first incident occurred when a bus carrying Shiite Muslim pilgrims returning from Iraq through Iran veered off a highway into a ravine in southwest Pakistan, killing at least 12 people and injuring 32 others, police and officials stated. The driver lost control on the Makran coastal highway due to brake failure while passing through Lasbela district in Baluchistan province. — The two astronauts who traveled to the International Space Station (ISS) aboard Boeing’s Starliner will have to return to Earth on a different spacecraft next year, NASA officials announced. Astronauts Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Sunita “Suni” Williams, who conducted the first crewed test flight of Starliner, are scheduled to return in February 2025 aboard Space-X Crew 9, according to NASA. The Boeing Starliner will return on a separate uncrewed flight, NASA stated. “There was too much risk for the crew,” a representative mentioned. — A 12-foot bronze statue of the late civil rights leader and U.S. Representative John Lewis was unveiled on Saturday in Decatur, Georgia. Lewis represented Georgia’s Fifth Congressional District, encompassing much of Atlanta, from 1987 until his death in 2020. Sculptor Basil Watson from Jamaica created the statue, which shows Lewis with his hands across his heart, and it is set atop a stone pedestal. The statue was installed in Decatur Square on August 16 and was unveiled this Saturday. — A man has been identified and charged in connection with a decades-old fatal hit-and-run case in Charlotte, North Carolina, police announced. Herbert Stanback, 68, has been charged with felony hit-and-run resulting in death for the 1989 killing of 52-year-old Ruth Buchanan, according to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department. Buchanan was crossing an intersection on December 29, 1989, when she was struck by a vehicle that failed to stop at a red light, police reported. — Authorities are investigating in northwest Georgia after four men were found dead in a park, officials said. Deputies responded to Pleasant Grove Park in Dalton around 11:15 p.m. Saturday following reports of gunfire. Upon arrival, they discovered four deceased Hispanic men, according to a news release from the Whitfield County Sheriff’s Office. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation has been called in to assist local authorities. — The driver of a dump truck learned a tough lesson after attempting to cross a covered bridge originally built before the Civil War. The loaded truck crashed into the Presumpscot River last Friday afternoon, creating a truck-shaped hole in the bridge’s planks. The driver sustained minor injuries, police reported, but Babb’s Bridge, originally constructed in 1840 and rebuilt in 1976 after a fire, was not as fortunate. — The iconic Coney Island Cyclone roller coaster in New York City was shut down indefinitely after it stopped mid-ride earlier this week. The 97-year-old wooden roller coaster at Luna Park halted on its ascent on Thursday when ride operators took it out of service due to a damaged chain sprocket in the motor room. The ride was stopped, and several people were safely removed without injury, according to New York City’s Department of Buildings.

Election Disaster: Fox News Host Admits Defeat Against Harris

Election Disaster: Fox News Host Admits Defeat Against Harris

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Eric Bowling former Fox News & Newsmax host publicly tells Trump that he blew it, stating ”It’s too late” and “we’re losing!” This is a must-see video rant exposing the public frustration of Kamala Harris’s popularity and Trump’s massive drop in the polls. Bowling doesn’t hold back with his video editorial calling it “tough love.”

Ukraine and Russia exchanged 115 prisoners of war each, totaling 230 individuals in a swap

Ukraine and Russia exchanged 115 prisoners of war each, totaling 230 individuals in a swap

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Unbiased headline news – German police have detained a 15-year-old boy and are working to determine if he is connected to the stabbing that left several people injured at a music festival in Solingen. Three people were killed in the attack, with eight others wounded—four of whom are reported to be in “very serious” condition. Authorities continue to search for the assailant. The victims include two men, aged 67 and 57, and a woman aged 56, according to police. — Authorities probing the sinking of a superyacht off the Sicilian coast that resulted in seven fatalities have launched a manslaughter investigation. “We have opened a case against unknown individuals under the suspicion of negligent shipwreck manslaughter,” stated Ambrogio Cartosio, the chief prosecutor of Termini Imerese, Sicily, during a Saturday press conference. Cartosio added, “We are ensuring the investigation remains confidential as required by law.” — Ukraine and Russia exchanged 115 prisoners of war each, totaling 230 individuals in a swap brokered by officials in the United Arab Emirates on Saturday. Eighty-two of the Ukrainian prisoners were captured during the defense of Mariupol by Russian forces, while the Russian POWs were taken during recent Ukrainian attacks in Russia’s Kursk region. Zelensky stated that Ukrainian officials are “working tirelessly to bring them all back” from Russian captivity. — Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former long-serving director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has been hospitalized with the West Nile virus and is now recovering at home. Fauci, who served on the White House Coronavirus Task Force, is expected to make a full recovery, according to his spokesman who spoke to CNN and The Washington Post. The 83-year-old Fauci also served as chief medical advisor to both former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden before retiring on December 31st, 2022. Currently, there is no vaccine or specific treatment for West Nile virus. — A rare but lethal disease spread by mosquitoes has prompted the town of Plymouth, Massachusetts, to take preventive measures. The city is closing its parks and fields each evening, while four nearby towns are urging residents to stay indoors at night. The concern centers around eastern equine encephalitis, a disease recently identified in an 80-year-old man, marking the first human case in Massachusetts since 2020, according to state health officials. — A New York mother is accused of driving the wrong way on a highway while under the influence of drugs, leading to a “severe” four-car crash that killed her 9-year-old son, state police reported. The fatal accident occurred early Thursday in Suffolk County, Long Island. Police identified Kerri Bedrick, 32, as the driver of the wrong-way SUV involved in the collision. Her son, Eli Henrys, who was in the back seat, was killed in the crash, authorities said. Bedrick faces multiple charges related to drug use and driving offenses, according to online court records. — A 33-year-old woman has been missing since Thursday after a flash flood swept through Grand Canyon National Park, officials said. Search and rescue teams are actively looking for Chenoa Nickerson, from Gilbert, Arizona, who was carried away by the floodwaters into a creek Thursday afternoon, according to the National Park Service. The flash flood struck Havasu Creek just before 1:30 p.m. local time on Thursday, the NPS reported. — A second former Memphis police officer facing federal charges in connection with the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols has entered a guilty plea, just weeks before the trial was scheduled to start, according to court documents. Emmitt Martin III, one of five former officers indicted last year on federal civil rights, conspiracy, and obstruction charges related to Nichols’ death, initially pleaded not guilty but has now admitted guilt to two charges during a plea hearing in federal court in Memphis.