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Month: June 2026

SCOTUS, Lower Court Hand Far Left Defeats on Election Integrity

SCOTUS ruled that Alabama’s electoral map can stand, and a federal district court let stand an order regarding DHS lists of verified citizens. …

The post SCOTUS, Lower Court Hand Far Left Defeats on Election Integrity appeared first on The New American.

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Ohio Becomes First State to Share Business Data With Feds to Hunt Fraudsters

COLUMBUS, Ohio—Ohio will be the first state in the country to share its corporate registration records with the Justice Department’s new National Fraud Detection Center, as fraud scandals continue to drain taxpayer dollars nationwide. The first-of-its-kind partnership will give federal investigators immediate access to the state’s public business registration data, which could help expose shell…

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Feds Suspend 49 Medicaid Home Healthcare Providers in Ohio

The announcement was made one month after similar measures were taken in California.

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John Bolton Reportedly Pleads Guilty To Mishandling Classified Materials

John Bolton Reportedly Pleads Guilty To Mishandling Classified Materials

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Supreme Court Upholds FCC’s Fines Against Wireless Carriers

Two telecom companies argued that the FCC’s internal adjudication system violates their constitutional rights.

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DOJ Launches $300 Million Initiative to Transform Public Safety in American Cities

Recent surges of federal law enforcement in cities such as Memphis have resulted in a decline in violent crime rates, including murders and sexual assaults.

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Lawsuits Over Disabilities Act Hobble California’s Small Businesses, Owners and Advocates Say

Lawyers suing over wheelchair ramps and restroom doors want a settlement, not compliance, say business owners: ‘It’s about how they can make a quick dollar.’

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Senate Seeks Pathway to Deportation for Naturalized Criminals

There are few remedies for removing foreign nationals who committed violent crimes, joined terrorist groups, or engaged in large-scale fraud after they became American citizens, lawmakers noted at a Senate hearing Wednesday.
Ken Cuccinelli, a former acting director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, pointed to two key cases that he said show the current law isn’t working, in his testimony to the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution.

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