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  • Republicans slam Jay Jones over violent messages to GOP party leader

    Republicans slam Jay Jones over violent messages to GOP party leader

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    Fellow Democrats are standing by Virginia state attorney general candidate Jay Jones, with none calling for him to exit the race despite his horrific text messages which have recently surfaced.

    In 2022 text messages to a colleague, Jones said he hoped former Republican House Speaker Todd Gilbert’s children would die. In a series of messages he doubled down, saying that such grief might be “a good thing” if it advanced his politics. Democrat gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger condemned the messages, but stopped short of calling for him to end his campaign.

    “I will always condemn violent language in our politics,” Spanberger said, adding that she had spoken “frankly” with him after the texts surfaced.

    VIRGINIA AG CANDIDATE ONCE REFERENCED PUTTING ‘TWO BULLETS TO THE HEAD’ OF GOP LEADER, TEXTS SHOW

    The Virginia Beach Democratic Committee issued a statement affirming its support for Jones, calling for all Virginians to “line up behind” him.

    “We are lined up, ten toes down, ready to organize, mobilize and deliver voters for Jay and our entire Democratic ticket,” the statement read. “Recent press may have spotlighted past mistakes. We say, let those without sin cast the first stone. Jay Jones has taken responsibility, apologized and shown he is committed to serving with integrity and accountability that his public record already shows.”

    Meanwhile, Republican Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares and Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears sharply criticized Jones over the weekend, saying that his recently published 2022 text messages raise serious questions about his fitness for office.

    Jason S. Miyares

    Republican Jason Miyares said he was alarmed by reports of Jay Jones recklessly endangering lives. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    “Jay Jones has shown he’s reckless, biased, and willing to trade away his integrity,” Miyares wrote in an open letter to Virginians, posted to social media late Saturday. “This conduct is disqualifying.”

    Miyares’ letter underscored what’s at stake in the race.

    CONSUMED WITH HATE’: WINSOME SEARS, JASON MIYARES UNLOAD ON DEMOCRAT JAY JONES OVER VIOLENT TEXTS

    “If you believe it is okay to wish death upon a political opponent, vote for my opponent,” he wrote. “If you believe it is worth the death of children to advance your political goals, vote for my opponent. If you want to give a green light to violent lunatics, vote for my opponent.” 

    Miyares said he will protect every Virginian, “regardless of whether they are a Democrat or Republican,” adding that he “cannot imagine someone running for this job who advocates for violence.”

    Speaking on Oct. 4, Earle-Sears decried moral decay in politics and said he had no business running for office.

    VIRGINIA GOP LT. GOV. WINSOME EARLE-SEARS VOICES OUTRAGE OVER DEMOCRAT OPPONENTS: ‘INCITING VIOLENCE’

    “The enemy is among us, devouring us in Virginia and in America today,” Sears said. “Jay Jones fantasizes about murdered little children lying lifeless in their mother’s arms. And yet he runs for attorney general, our chief law enforcement officer.”

    jay jones speaks from podium

    Virginia attorney general candidate Jerrauld “Jay” Jones speaks at an event in Norfolk, Virginia. (Trevor Metcalfe/The Virginian-Pilot/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

    Jones has since apologized, calling the remarks “embarrassing and shameful,” and said he had reached out personally to Gilbert and his family.

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    The latest revelation comes amid heightened political tensions and a growing number of incidents that have fueled concerns about violence in national politics.

    From the dual attempted assassinations of President Donald Trump to the murder of Charlie Kirk, a chilling pattern is unmistakable: the left’s relentless demonization of conservatives is fueling real-world bloodshed.

    Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin called on Jones to drop out of the race Saturday morning, which is roughly four weeks away.

    “This violent, disgusting rhetoric targeted at an elected official and his children is beyond disqualifying,” Youngkin said on X Saturday morning.

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  • Deion Sanders says he was ‘hurting like crazy’ after Colorado loss

    Deion Sanders says he was ‘hurting like crazy’ after Colorado loss

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    Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders expressed concerns that he might be dealing with more blood clots as he was seen sitting at times during the team’s loss to TCU on Saturday.

    Sanders underwent treatment for bladder cancer during the offseason. It was also revealed that a section of his intestine was reconstructed to function as a bladder. He vowed to continue coaching with a portable toilet on the sideline just in case he needed it.

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    Deion Sanders watches his team warm up

    Colorado head coach Deion Sanders watches his team warm up before an NCAA college football game against TCU Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, in Fort Worth, Texas. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    He said after the game he was “hurting like crazy.”

    “Cat’s out of the bag, all right. I think I’ve got more blood clots,” Sanders said. “It don’t make sense. I’m hurting like crazy. … I’m not getting blood to my leg. That’s why my leg is throbbing.”

    He said he had a doctor’s appointment on Monday to deal with the issue.

    “Sorry to get that out, but thank you for noticing,” he said after being asked about his health.

    Deion Sanders on the sidelines

    Colorado head coach Deion Sanders calls for a time out in the first half of an NCAA college football game against TCU Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, in Fort Worth, Texas. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    BILL BELICHICK GETS RIPPED ON SOCIAL MEDIA AFTER CLEMSON BLOWS OUT UNC: ‘COMPLETE DUMPSTER FIRE’

    Sanders announced in July he had bladder cancer and was cured of it.

    Prior to the cancer diagnosis, the Pro Football Hall of Famer struggled with issues to his left foot. He had two toes amputated in 2021 because of blood clot issues while at Jackson State.

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    Deion Sanders points to a reporter

    Colorado head coach Deion Sanders points as he responds to a question during a news conference after the team’s NCAA college football game against TCU Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, in Fort Worth, Texas. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    He missed Pac-12 media day in 2023, his first year at Colorado, after a procedure to remove a blood clot from his right leg and another to straighten toes on his left foot.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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  • Dave Brat says ‘rage’ politics is the latest hurdle for GOP to overcome

    Dave Brat says ‘rage’ politics is the latest hurdle for GOP to overcome

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    EXCLUSIVE: Much has changed in the political landscape since former Rep. Dave Brat’s upset win over then-House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., though conservatives have repeatedly managed to gain ground over time.

    Democrats have been lambasted as of late for heated political rhetoric that has led – whether directly or indirectly – to death threats and attacks on Republicans and conservatives.

    Brat, now vice provost at Liberty University in Lynchburg, noted he was speaking for himself and discussed how the politics of “rage” made their way to Virginia in recent weeks.

    FOX NEWS POLITICS NEWSLETTER: HEGSETH REJECTS ‘WOKE’ POLICIES

    Virginia State Capitol at Youngkin inauguration

    The Virginia State Capitol, center, is shown, as revelers celebrate Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s inauguration. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    Recordings of former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, the Democratic nominee for governor, telling crowds to “let your rage fuel you” have made the rounds amid already heightened political tensions following assassination attempts on President Donald Trump, Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh and the murder of Charlie Kirk.

    “I was on a radio show earlier this morning and Spanberger — all political views are my own again — gave out the secret sauce on the left: Let your rage out, right. That’s her new line,” Brat said, citing those remarks.

    Spanberger dismissed any contention that she is encouraging violence, telling Fox News Digital through a spokesperson that she will “continue to condemn comments that continue to make light of or justify violence of any kind – full stop.”

    Brat was unconvinced, adding that he has looked into “psychological underpinnings” of political movements including the nascent transgender rights issues that have been front-and-center in Virginia schools and public spaces.

    We (Republicans) believe in protecting the rights of all people. Life, liberty, pursuit of happiness for everybody. We’re the ones where the Judeo-Christian West is the tradition. They gave you human rights in the 12th century all the way up through protections in our Constitution. So that’s now what’s at stake.”

    WATCH: LAWMAKERS WRESTLE WITH HOW TO APPROACH HATEFUL POLITICAL RHETORIC IN WAKE OF KIRK ASSASSINATION

    dave brat walks at white house

    Rep. Dave Brat R-VA is seen at the White House while in office in Washington. (Reuters)

    Within the last week, multiple reports of death threats against Virginia lawmakers came to light.

    Del. Geary Higgins, R-Lovettsville, told Fox News Digital a man allegedly threatened to shoot him at his next rally in response to a defense of GOP gubernatorial nominee Winsome Earle-Sears after she was faced with racist signage at a protest.

    Del. Kim Taylor, R-Petersburg, faced a similar threat – telling Fox News Digital a man allegedly threatened to kill her while claiming Republicans are ruining the country.

    Some on the left have harnessed such “rage” politics in their latest attempt to paint the Judeo-Christian right as the “judgmental, bad people” as they have in past elections, Brat said.

    “When minority [groups] get to act like they’re the majority and put these crazy sexual stuff in kindergarten textbooks. That’s we’re against. And then when the trans folks are out with quotes saying ‘When we come alive and find out who we are, the emotions come out full force. And it ends up, you know, letting us, in a sense of rage’ — and this is in quotes out on the web all over the place, a bunch of other emotions as well,” Brat said.

    EXPERTS WARN LEFTIST CELEBRATIONS OF CHARLIE KIRK’S DEATH SIGNAL A DANGEROUS MAINSTREAM SHIFT IN POLITICS

    “And so, for the left to be using these folks as a political tool, for me, it’s just obscene.”

    The right, he said, is the actual political wing that created the “protection of minority rights.”

    Similar public derision by conservatives is not new, and is something he had to deal with during his own time in office, Brat contended, when asked what has changed in the decade-plus since.

    “What else has changed: There’s been a MAGA revolution,” he said – adding it was much different even on the right when he was in office and conservatives were out of vogue.

    WHO IS VIRGINIA’S NEXT GLENN YOUNGKIN: HOW THE GOP WINS STATEWIDE AGAIN

    Brat spoke about the friction he and the new crop of conservatives had with the proverbial “old guard” during their time, remarking that now-Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard – then a Hawaii Democrat – was one of few to even acknowledge them.

    “We were backbenchers. Tulsi Gabbard would come back and hang out with us because we were fun,” he quipped.

    Brat also clashed with top Republicans including anti-Trump then-Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pa., the leader of the House Ethics Committee.

    Dent later denied Brat’s claim he wanted to kick the Freedom Caucus out of the GOP conference for not toeing the line.

    The Freedom Caucus, which included Brat, also played a pivotal role in ousting then-House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio – a role for which the man Brat beat, Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., was seen as heir apparent.

    I’M A DEMOCRAT, AND CHARLIE KIRK’S MURDER MUST UNITE ALL AMERICANS AGAINST VIOLENCE

    While the caucus remains, currently under the leadership of Rep. Andy Harris of Maryland, the “MAGA Revolution” and Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s split from the Silicon Valley establishment have greatly affected body politic, Brat said.

    Those, he said, should be a boon to Earle-Sears and the Virginia GOP ticket.

    “So nothing’s really changed, it’s the same ingredients.

    Brat said the one condition of U.S. politics that has changed since his own win or Youngkin’s win has been events like the murder of Charlie Kirk, which also connects to the theme of rage in politics.

    Brat said that after 9/11, church attendance briefly rose and “nationalism kicked in” – but faded quickly.

    Kirk’s murder and other recent threats against lawmakers are likely to stick longer in voters’ minds, Brat predicted. Kirk’s murder has also been linked by some to leftist “rage.”

    Kirk combined faith with constitutional principles, Brat said, adding younger people are becoming educated in that way through people like the TPUSA leader.

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    “Charlie was all about faith and reason together in the university — that’s what a university is supposed to do is unite faith and reason,” said Brat.

    “If that comes to fruition right now, we could see some shockers in Virginia and New Jersey.”

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  • Former NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez injured in Indianapolis stabbing: report

    Former NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez injured in Indianapolis stabbing: report

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    Former NFL player and current FOX Sports analyst Mark Sanchez is recovering in a hospital after he was reportedly stabbed in Indianapolis ahead of Sunday’s game between the Colts and Las Vegas Raiders. 

    FOX Sports released a statement confirming Sanchez was in “stable condition.” The statement did not describe the nature of the incident that led to his injury. 

    Mark Sanchez walking

    Mark Sanchez on the field during a game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium Sept. 17, 2023, in Inglewood, Calif. (Ric Tapia/Getty Images)

    “Mark Sanchez was injured in Indianapolis on Saturday and is currently recovering in the hospital in stable condition. We are deeply grateful to the medical team for their exceptional care and support. Our thoughts and prayers are with Mark, and we ask that everyone please respect his and his family’s privacy during this time.”

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    TMZ Sports first reported that Sanchez was injured in a stabbing early Saturday morning. 

    The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department told Fox News Digital in a statement that it was investigating a “physical disturbance” that took place just after midnight near Senate Avenue and West Washington Street. 

    Mark Sanchez

    Fox TV analyst Mark Sanchez before a game between the Washington Football Team and Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field Dec. 21, 2021, in Philadelphia.  (Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

    NFL STAR XAVIEN HOWARD ABRUPTLY RETIRES AFTER 4 GAMES WITH COLTS

    According to police, two men were involved in the incident. One suffered “lacerations” and the other sustained injuries “consistent with stab wounds.” The stabbing victim, believed to be Sanchez, was hospitalized and is in stable condition. 

    Investigators said the incident was “isolated” and “not a random act of violence.” The two men were not identified by law enforcement other than saying they weren’t “local residents.” 

    Mark Sanchez warms up

    In a Sept. 12, 2013, file photo, New York Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez, who normally throws right-handed, throws a pass with his left hand before a game against the New England Patriots.  (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

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    Sanchez, a 10-year NFL veteran most notably for the New York Jets, was scheduled to call Sunday’s game between the Colts and the Las Vegas Raiders at Lucas Oil Stadium, TMZ reported. 

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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  • Supreme Court opens new term with Trump power disputes

    Supreme Court opens new term with Trump power disputes

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    The Supreme Court will launch its new term Monday with a focus on controversial prior rulings and a review of President Donald Trump’s sweeping executive agenda.

    After a three-month recess, the nine justices met together for the first time this week to reset their docket, and discuss appeals that have piled up over the summer. The high court will resume oral arguments to confront issues like gender identity, election redistricting, and free speech.

    But looming over the federal judiciary is the return of Trump-era legal battles. The administration has been winning most of the emergency appeals at the Supreme Court since January, that dealt only with whether challenged policies could go into effect temporarily, while the issues play out in the lower courts — including immigration, federal spending cuts, workforce reductions and transgender people in the military.

    In doing so, the 6-3 conservative majority has reversed about two dozen preliminary nationwide injunctions imposed by lower federal courts, leading to frustration and confusion among many judges.

    FEDERAL JUDGES ANONYMOUSLY CRITICIZE SUPREME COURT FOR OVERTURNING DECISIONS WITH EMERGENCY RULINGS

    Supreme Court Justices

    The nine Supreme Court justices pose for their official portrait inside the Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 7, 2022. (Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images )

    Now those percolating petitions are starting to reach the Supreme Court for final review — and legal analysts say the bench may be poised to grant broad unilateral powers to the president.

    The justices fast-tracked the administration’s appeal over tariffs on dozens of countries that were blocked by lower courts. Oral arguments will be held in November.

    In December, the justices will decide whether to overturn a 90-year precedent dealing with the president’s ability to fire members of some federal regulatory agencies like the Federal Trade Commission. 

    And in January, the power of President Trump to remove Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors will be tested in a major constitutional showdown. For now, the Biden-appointed Cook will remain on the job.

    “A big fraction of the Supreme Court’s docket will present the question: ‘can President Trump do?’— then fill in the blank. And that could be imposing tariffs; firing independent board members; removing illegal aliens; sending the military into cities like Los Angeles,” said Thomas Dupree, a prominent appellate attorney and constitutional law expert. “So, much of what the Supreme Court is deciding this term is whether the president has acted within or has exceeded his authority.” 

    The tariffs dispute will be the court’s first major constitutional test on the merits over how broadly the conservative majority high court views Trump’s muscular view of presidential power, a template for almost certain future appeals of his executive agenda.

    Presidential prerogative or power push?

    In earlier disputes over temporary enforcement of those policies, the court’s left-leaning justices warned against the judiciary becoming a rubber stamp, ceding its power in favor of this president.

    After a late August high court order granting the government the power to temporarily terminate nearly $800 million in already-approved health research grants, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said her conservative colleagues had “ben[t] over backward to accommodate” the Trump administration. “Right when the Judiciary should be hunkering down to do all it can to preserve the law’s constraints, the Court opts instead to make vindicating the rule of law and preventing manifestly injurious Government action as difficult as possible. This is Calvinball jurisprudence with a twist. Calvinball has only one rule: There are no fixed rules. We seem to have two: that one, and this Administration always wins.”

    But some of Jackson’s colleagues have denied they are paving the way for Trump’s aggressive efforts to redo the federal government.

    FEDERAL APPEALS COURT WEIGHS TRUMP BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP ORDER AS ADMIN OUTLINES ENFORCEMENT DETAILS

    Ketanji Brown Jackson

    Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson stands as she and members of the Supreme Court pose for a new group portrait following her addition, at the Supreme Court building in Washington, Oct. 7, 2022.  (J. Scott Applewhite, File/AP Photo)

    “The framers recognized, in a way that I think is brilliant, that preserving liberty requires separating the power,” said Justice Brett Kavanaugh earlier this month at a Texas event. “No one person or group of people should have too much power in our system.”

    And Justice Amy Coney Barrett told Fox News’ Bret Baier three weeks ago that she and her colleagues “don’t wear red and blue, we all wear black because judges are nonpartisan … We’re all trying to get it right. We’re not playing for a team.”

    Barrett, who is promoting her new book, “Listening to the Law,” said her court takes a long-term view, and is not reflexively on Trump’s side.

    “We’re not deciding cases just for today. And we’re not deciding cases based on the president, as in the current occupant of the office,” Barrett told Fox News. “I think the judiciary needs to stay in its lane … we’re taking each case and we’re looking at the question of presidential power as it comes. And the cases that we decide today are going to matter, four presidencies from now, six presidencies from now.”

    KAVANAUGH CITES 3 PRESIDENTS IN EXPLAINING SUPREME COURT’S BALLOONING EMERGENCY DOCKET

    U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett is seen at the White House shortly after her Senate confirmation in October 2020. Justice Barrett delivered remarks at the 2025 Seventh Circuit Judicial Conference at the Swissotel hotel in Chicago, Illinois, on August 18, 2025. (Getty Images)

    Justice Amy Coney Barrett speaks at the Seventh Circuit Judicial Conference in Chicago on Aug. 18, 2025. (Getty Images)

    These sharp court fractures between competing ideologies will likely escalate, as the justices begin a more robust look at a president’s power, and by dint, their own.

    Divisive decisions

    “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law,” Trump cryptically posted on social media a month after retaking office.

    Federal courts have since been trying to navigate and articulate the limits of the executive branch, while managing their own powers.

    Yet several federal judges — appointed by both Democratic and Republican presidents — have expressed concern that the Supreme Court has been regularly overturning rulings by lower courts dealing with challenges to Trump administration policies — mostly with little or no explanation in its decisions.

    Those judges — who all requested anonymity to speak candidly — tell Fox News those orders blocking enforcement have left the impression they are not doing their jobs or are biased against the President.

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TORPEDOES SCOTUS WITH EMERGENCY REQUESTS AND SEES SURPRISING SUCCESS

    President Donald Trump takes press questions.

    President Donald Trump speaks during a White House press conference on Supreme Court rulings in Washington, D.C. on June 27, 2025.  (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    Those frustrations have spilled into open court.

    “They’re leaving the circuit courts, the district courts out in limbo,” said federal appeals Judge James Wynn about the high court, during oral arguments this month over the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) access to Social Security data.

    “We’re out here flailing,” said Wynn, an Obama bench appointee. “I’m not criticizing the justices. They’re using a vehicle that’s there, but they are telling us nothing. They could easily just give us direction, and we would follow it.”

    Courting controversy

    The president may be winning short-term victories in a court where he has appointed a third of its members, but that has not stopped him or his associates from criticizing federal judges, even calling for their removal from office when preliminary rulings have gone against the administration.

    “This judge, like many of the Crooked Judges I am forced to appear before, should be IMPEACHED!!!” Trump posted on social media, after a March court ruling temporarily halting the deportation of alleged Venezuelan gang members.

    The target of the attack was DC-based Chief Judge James Boasberg, appointed to the bench by President Obama.

     Top Trump White House policy advisor Stephen Miller, in interviews, has warned against some unaccountable and “communist crazy judges” “trying to subvert the presidency.” 

    TRUMP TURNS TO SUPREME COURT IN FIGHT TO OUST BIDEN-ERA CONSUMER SAFETY OFFICIALS

    Stephen Miller gesturing at the podium

    White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller speaks during a press briefing at the White House, Thursday, May 1, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Alex Brandon/AP Photo)

    According to an analysis by Stanford University’s Adam Bonica, federal district judges ruled against the administration 94.3% of the time between May and June. 

    But the Supreme Court has in turn reversed those injunctions more than 90% of the time, giving the president temporary authority to move ahead with his sweeping reform agenda.

    As for the rhetoric, the high court has walked a delicate path, reluctant to criticize Trump directly, at least for now.

    “The fact that some of our public leaders are lawyers advocating or making statements challenging the rule of law tells me that, fundamentally, our law schools are failing,” said Justice Sonia Sotomayor at a recent Georgetown University Law Center event, without naming Trump by name. “Once we lose our common norms, we’ve lost the rule of law completely.”

    Chief Justice John Roberts in March offered a rare public statement criticizing impeachment calls from the right.

    But several federal judges who spoke to Fox News also wish Roberts would do more to assert his authority and to temper what one judge called “disturbing” rhetoric.

    The U.S. Marshals Service — responsible for court security — reports more than 500 threats against federal judges since last October, more than in previous years. Law enforcement sources say that includes Boasberg, who, along with his family, has received physical threats and intimidating social media posts.

    TURLEY: JUSTICE JACKSON SHOWS ‘JUDICIAL ABANDON’ IN LONE DISSENT ON TRUMP LAYOFF RULING

    Charlie Kirk in October 2024.

    Charlie Kirk was a conservative activist who led Turning Point USA. (Alex Brandon/The Associated Press)

    “I think it is a sign of a culture that has, where political discourse has soured beyond control,” said Justice Barrett in recent days.

    “The attacks are not random. They seem designed to intimidate those of us who serve in this critical capacity,” said Justice Jackson in May. “The threats and harassment are attacks on our democracy, on our system of government.”

    The administration in recent days asked Congress for $58 million more in security for executive branch officials and judges, following the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist who led Turning Point USA. 

    Testy term awaits

    A Fox News poll from this summer found 47% of voters approve of the job the Supreme Court is doing, a 9-point jump since last year when a record low 38% approved.

    “Over the past decade, public confidence in our major institutions has declined,” says Republican pollster Daron Shaw, who helps conduct the Fox News survey with Democrat Chris Anderson. “The Court’s rebound could reflect its attempts to steer a middle course on politically polarizing questions or indicate an uptick in positive attitudes toward our more venerable institutions.”

    Still, by more than 2-to-1, more voters think the court is too conservative (43%) than too liberal in its decisions (18%, a low), while 36% think the court’s rulings are about right. That continues a seven-year trend.

    FEDERAL JUDGES ANONYMOUSLY CRITICIZE SUPREME COURT FOR OVERTURNING DECISIONS WITH EMERGENCY RULINGS

    Supreme Court building

    The U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C., on June 20, 2024. ( Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    The public’s views of the court’s ability to steer clear of politics will be tested this term.

    Besides the two Trump-related appeals, the justices are already scheduled to decide:

    • At least two appeals involving LGBTQ+ rights: which public school sports teams transgender students can join; and state laws banning so-called “conversion therapy” for minors who may have gender identity or sexual orientation issues.
    • Two election-related disputes involving partisan gerrymandering and federal campaign spending coordination that each could have major impacts on the 2026 midterms and beyond.

    Precedent on a precipice

    But court watchers are pointing to several hot-button pending appeals where “stare decisis” or respect for established landmark court rulings will be tested:  same-sex marriage and communal school prayer.   

    The high court is expected to decide in coming weeks whether to put those petitions on its argument calendar, with possible rulings on the merits by June 2026.

    But other cases are already awaiting a final ruling: the use of race in redistricting under the Voting Rights Act; and independent government boards.

    “I think the likeliest candidates for being revisited are the ones that involve the power of the president to fire the heads of federal agencies,” said attorney Dupree. “This is an old precedent that’s been on the books really back since the New Deal, and it’s come into question in recent years. There’s been a long shadow hanging over these decisions, and I think the Supreme Court is poised to revisit those this term and in all likelihood overrule that.”

    The court may have already set the stage, by using the emergency docket in recent weeks to allow Trump to temporarily fire members of several other independent federal agencies without cause. The court’s liberal wing complained that giving the president that power without explanation effectively unravels the 1935 precedent known as “Humphrey’s Executor.”

    KAVANAUGH CITES 3 PRESIDENTS IN EXPLAINING SUPREME COURT’S BALLOONING EMERGENCY DOCKET

    “Today’s order favors the president over our precedent,” said Justice Elena Kagan in a blistering dissent against Trump’s removal of Gwynne Wilcox from the National Labor Relations Board.

    The court’s “impatience to get on with things — to now hand the President the most unitary, meaning also the most subservient, administration since Herbert Hoover (and maybe ever) — must reveal how that eventual decision will go” on the merits, added Kagan.

    Sotomayor said recent overturned precedents were “really bad” for certain groups of people.

    “And that’s what’s at risk, is in each time we change precedent, we are changing the contours of a right that people thought they had,” she said this month. “Once you take that away, think of how much more is at risk later. Not just in this situation.”

    The conservative justices in recent years have not been shy about revisiting cases that had been settled for decades but now have been overturned: the nationwide right to abortion, affirmative action in education and the discretionary power of federal agencies.

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    Other pending issues the justices may soon be forced to confront which could upset longstanding precedent include libel lawsuits from public officials, flag burning and Ten Commandments displays in public schools.

    One justice who has been more willing than his benchmates to overrule precedents may be its most influential: Justice Clarence Thomas.

    “I don’t think that any of these cases that have been decided are the gospel,” Thomas said last week at a Catholic University event. If it is “totally stupid, and that’s what they’ve decided, you don’t go along with it just because it’s decided” already.

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  • Police dismiss attorney’s findings in attempt to prove Kyren Lacy’s innocence

    Police dismiss attorney’s findings in attempt to prove Kyren Lacy’s innocence

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    Kyren Lacy’s attorney provided potential evidence in an attempt to prove the innocence of the late LSU star over charges he was facing before dying by suicide in April.

    Lacy was under investigation in Louisiana for a crash in December that left 78-year-old Herman Hall, a passenger, dead, officials said in January. He was accused of driving recklessly — speeding and passing in a no-passing zone — when the motorist swerved to avoid Lacy and crashed into another vehicle.

    However, in an interview with HTV10, Lacy’s attorney, Matthew Ory, provided video that appears to show Lacy’s vehicle well behind the crash and that he was more than 200 feet away from the cars upon impact.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM 

    Kyren Lacy

    Kyren Lacy of the LSU Tigers poses for a portrait during media day at the LSU Indoor Practice Facility June 17, 2024, in Baton Rouge, La. (LSU Athletics/University Images via Getty Images)

    “We know from data that Kyren Lacy did in fact pass four cars. There’s no disputing that. Further north, Kyren Lacy passed four cars,” Ory began.

    “However, he was back in his lane of travel, 92.3 yards — back in his lane — behind Mr. Hall. At the time of impact, he’s 72.6 yards behind the vehicles at the time of impact. Key word: behind the vehicles. That is not how this story was ever painted. Never.”

    Ory also provided data that showed another vehicle, “vehicle 2,” tailgating the truck that crashed into the vehicle Hall was in, going nearly 50 mph just 0.5 seconds behind it and 1.5 seconds before the crash. 

    Ory also provided bodycam footage of an officer talking to a man in that truck who claimed that the driver of vehicle 2 “caused” the crash despite police telling the man to write down specifics regarding Lacy in his statement, which was ultimately refused.

    Kyren Lacy stiff arm

    Kyren Lacy runs the ball and stiff-arms Sage Ryan during the LSU Tigers’ spring game at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, La., April 22, 2023. (Scott Clause/USA Today Network )

    ROBERT GRIFFIN III ‘THANKFUL TO GOD’ AFTER FAMILY GETS INTO ‘WORST CAR ACCIDENT OF OUR LIVES’

    Louisiana State Police released the following statement to Fox News Digital in response to Ory’s evidence.

    “Following the crash, LSP conducted a detailed investigation with the assistance of crash reconstruction experts and with all available information at the time. Investigative findings revealed that Mr. Lacy’s reckless driving while approaching oncoming traffic led to the events of the crash. The findings were presented to the 17th Judicial District Court, which approved an arrest warrant based on the evidence collected. As with all investigations leading to arrest, the subjects of the investigation are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. 

    “No one disputes that he was behind the crash scene. His swerving, passing cars and reckless operation caused the series of crash events.”

    Kyren Lacy looks on

    LSU Tigers wide receiver Kyren Lacy  (Stephen Lew/Imagn Images)

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    Rocky Arceneaux, Lacy’s agent, said in January that his client was cooperating with authorities in the investigation.

    Lacy transferred to LSU in 2022. He had his best season in 2024, when he recorded 58 catches for 866 yards and nine touchdowns.

    Fox News’ Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.

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  • Trans athlete leads girls high school volleyball team to first place

    Trans athlete leads girls high school volleyball team to first place

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    A transgender volleyball player in California has helped lead a girls high school team to an undefeated start in league play and first place after multiple opponents forfeited matches.

    Jurupa Valley High School’s girls volleyball team improved to 6-0 in league play to cement its place at the top of the River Valley League standings with a win Friday over Rubidoux. 

    The win also pushed the team’s overall record to 14-8 on the season. 

    However, eight of the team’s wins, including one of its six league wins, came via forfeit. The eight teams that have forfeited games to Jurupa Valley this season have not provided a reason, but it is believed they are in response to trans athlete AB Hernandez. 

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    The most recent team to forfeit was Patriot High School, which was the one league rival to forfeit against JVHS and also the first team within the same school district to do so. 

    Jurupa Valley is scheduled to face Patriot again Oct. 13. 

    Meanwhile, two of Hernandez’s teammates have also stepped away from the team this season in protest and have filed a lawsuit against the Jurupa Unified School District (JUSD) over their experience playing with Hernandez over the last three years. 

    Jurupa has just five games left in the regular season, including the second Patriot meeting, before the postseason starts. 

    Last November, while Jurupa Valley went on to win its league, another high school in California saw a postseason match forfeited. Stone Ridge Christian High School forfeited a semifinal playoff match to San Francisco Waldorf, which had a trans player on its girls volleyball and girls basketball team. Stone Ridge Christin directly cited the trans athlete as the reason for the forfeit to San Fracisco Waldorf. 

    “Unfortunately, we were just informed that our opponent, San Francisco Waldorf, has a male athlete playing for their team,” the team said in a statement. 

    INSIDE GAVIN NEWSOM’S TRANSGENDER VOLLEYBALL CRISIS

    “At SRC, we believe God’s Word is authoritative and infallible. It is Truth. And as Genesis makes clear, God wonderfully and immutably created each person as male or female. We do not believe sex is changeable, and we do not intend to participate in events that send a different message. We also have a duty and responsibility to care for the health and safety of our athletes. So, after consulting with our students, coaches and staff, we have made the difficult decision to forfeit Saturday’s game. Standing for Biblical truth means more than the outcome of a game.” 

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office recently provided a statement to Fox News Digital addressing the state’s influx of controversies involving transgender volleyball players, suggesting the situation falls outside his responsibility and deferring fault to the California Department of Education (CDE), California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) and state legislature. 

    “CIF is an independent nonprofit that governs high school sports. The California Department of Education is a separate constitutional office. Neither is under the Governor’s authority. CIF and the CDE have stated they follow existing state law — a law that was passed in 2013 and signed by Governor Jerry Brown (not Newsom) and in line with 21 other states. For the law to change, the legislature would need to send the Governor a bill. They have not,” the statement said. 

    The CIF and CDE are being sued by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) for refusing to change policies allowing biological males to compete in girls sports. 

    On April 1, the California state Legislature blocked two bills that would reverse the current law that allows males in girls sports. 

    Every Democrat voted against it, with Assembly member Rick Chavez Zbur arguing that one of the bills “is really reminiscent to me of what happened in Nazi Germany in the 1930s. We are moving towards autocracy in this country. In Nazi Germany, transgender people were persecuted, barred from public life.” 

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    Zbur said this while in the presence of a descendant of a Holocaust survivor, who had to excuse herself from the chamber, according to GOP Assembly member Kate Sanchez. 

    “She stood up and left because she was just so disgusted with the comparison,” Sanchez told Fox News Digital. 

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  • Belichick faces social media backlash after UNC gets blown out again

    Belichick faces social media backlash after UNC gets blown out again

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    The Bill Belichick experience in Chapel Hill is not going smoothly.

    The Tar Heels fell to 2-3 on the season Saturday after an embarrassing 38-10 loss to Clemson, which entered the day winning just one of its first four games.

    UNC trailed 28-3 after just one quarter after losing to UCF 34-9 last week.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM 

    Dabo Swinney and Bill Belichick

    Clemson Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney meets with North Carolina Tar Heels head coach Bill Belichick before a game at Kenan Stadium Saturday. (Bob Donnan/Imagn Images)

    North Carolina’s two wins came against Charlotte and Richmond. The Tar Heels began the season with a 48-14 loss to TCU.

    As the Tigers were blowing out UNC, many took to social media to rip the eight-time Super Bowl winner.

    “I would not hold it against Belichick if he just quit at halftime and was never seen again,” Dave Portnoy said. “Somebody has to get him the hell out of college football asap.”

    “Bill Belichick needs to tip his cap and call Tom Brady his daddy. This will go down as the worst ending to an otherwise legendary career in the history of sports,” one user wrote

    Bill Belichick yells from the sidelines

    North Carolina head coach Bill Belichick’s Tar Heels fell to 2-3 on the season Saturday. (AP Photo/Nell Redmond)

    POLICE DEFEND FINDINGS OF KYREN LACY CRASH INVESTIGATION AFTER ATTORNEY PROVIDES NEW EVIDENCE

    OutKick’s Clay Travis added, “So the Bill Belichick UNC tenure is a complete dumpster fire. Not sure he makes it to year two. He should have retired when Tom Brady left New England, his coaching legacy would be infinitely higher. Now he’s just lighting all of that on fire.”

    Antonio Williams threw a 75-yard trick-play touchdown pass to T.J. Moore on the first offensive snap to start Clemson’s dominating show. Cade Klubnik threw four touchdowns in the game’s first 30 minutes.

    Clemson was favored by roughly 14 points, but the Tigers, ranked No. 4 entering the season, have had a nightmare of a season so far by their standards.

    Bill Belichick complaining

    North Carolina Tar Heels head coach Bill Belichick reacts to a play while on the sideline Saturday in the second quarter at Kenan Stadium. (Bob Donnan/Imagn Images)

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    UNC is off next week before traveling to Cal next week.

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  • WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert’s Caitlin Clark comments resurface

    WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert’s Caitlin Clark comments resurface

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    WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert’s previous comments about league and Indiana Fever superstar Caitlin Clark’s earning potential during a CNBC interview resurfaced on social media Friday.

    The previous comments came to light after Engelbert denied telling Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier that Clark “should be grateful she makes $16 million off the court because without the platform that the WNBA gives her, she wouldn’t make anything,” according to Collier.

    While Engelbert denied making that statement during a news conference Friday, her previous comments during an interview at the CNBC Changemakers Summit in April 2024 echoed similar themes.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    Caitlin Clark and Cathy Engelbert at the WNBA Draft

    Caitlin Clark poses with WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert after she is selected as the No. 1 overall pick by the Indiana Fever in the 2024 WNBA Draft at Brooklyn Academy of Music in Brooklyn, N.Y., April 15, 2024. (Brad Penner/USA Today Sports)

    “Caitlin has the ability to make up to a half-million dollars just in WNBA wages this year. So, of course, they’re just looking at a base which is collectively bargained. And, actually, it’s low because she’s the No. 1 pick. She’ll make a little more than that,” Engelbert said.

    “She also has millions and millions of dollars [in] endorsements. Because she declared to become pro, her endorsements are higher in dollar value. She has a global platform now, not just a U.S. platform. So, she’s going to do just fine as will the top players in the league as every league does.”

    Engelbert’s made the comments just days after Clark was selected with the No. 1 pick in the 2024 WNBA Draft by the Fever. Clark’s WNBA base salary that year was just $76,535. 

    Clark did sign an eight-year, $28 million deal with Nike that she signed in April 2024, before she ever played a game in the WNBA. And she had previous deals with Nike and other sponsors during her college career at Iowa.

    The commissioner faced immense backlash from fans, media pundits and active players after Collier made the allegations that Engelbert said Clark should be “grateful” and “wouldn’t make anything” without the WNBA last week, which Collier said came in a private conversation.

    Collier also alleged Engelbert told her, “Players should be on their knees, thanking their lucky stars for the media rights deal that I got them.”

    While addressing the alleged comments about Clark, Engelbert denied making them.

    “Obviously, I did not make those comments. Caitlin has been a transformational player in this league. She’s been a great representative of the game. She’s brought in tens of millions of new fans to the game,” Engelbert said at Friday’s news conference.

    However, Engelbert did not explicitly deny making the alleged comments about players that “should be on their knees.” Instead, the commissioner responded by claiming there have been a lot of “inaccuracies” reported in the media.

    “There’s a lot of inaccuracy out there through social media and all this reporting,” Engelbert said. “A lot of reporting, a lot of innacuracy about what I say, what I didn’t say.”

    INSIDE CAITLIN CLARK AND ANGEL REESE’S IMPACT ON MEN’S BASKETBALL

    Napheesa Collier warms up

    Minnesota Lynx star Napheesa Collier has been outspoken about WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert’s recent comments. (Trevor Ruszkowski/Imagn Images)

    Engelbert later said, “I’m disheartened. I’m a human too. I have a family. I have two kids who are devastated by these comments. So, all I say is that it’s obviously been a tough week, and I just think there’s a lot of innacuracy out there.”

    Still, Engelbert acknowledged that if players don’t feel “appreciated,” she has “to do better.”

    “I was disheartened to hear that some players feel the league and that I personally do not care about them or listen to them,” Engelbert said before Game 1 of the WNBA Finals Friday night.

    “If the players in the ‘W’ don’t feel appreciated and value from the league, we have to do better, and I have to do better.”

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    The WNBA and its players’ union, the WNBPA, are in negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement.

    The players’ association and the WNBA agreed to an eight-year agreement in 2020, but the WNBPA voted last eyar to opt out of the agreement early. The current agreement expires Oct. 31. 

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  • Miyares, Sears say Democrat Jay Jones ‘unfit’ after violent texts surface

    Miyares, Sears say Democrat Jay Jones ‘unfit’ after violent texts surface

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    Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares and Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears delivered a blistering one-two punch this weekend, saying Democrat AG candidate Jay Jones has disqualified himself from office after texts emerged in which he wished for the death of a Republican rival’s children.

    The coordinated condemnations marked the most aggressive escalation yet in a controversy that has thrown Virginia politics into a fever pitch heading into the nationally watched 2025 election.

    “Jay Jones has shown he’s reckless, biased, and willing to trade away his integrity,” Miyares wrote in an open letter to Virginians, posted to social media late Saturday. “This conduct is disqualifying.”

    Hours later, Sears took the stage to deliver remarks and accused Democrats of being “consumed with hate.”

    YOUNGKIN SAYS DEMOCRAT AG CANDIDATE JAY JONES MUST ‘STEP AWAY IN DISGRACE’ OVER TEXTS ABOUT FORMER GOP LEADER

    Winsome Sears condemns Democrat Jay Jones over violent texts in Virginia

    Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears speaks at a podium on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, after texts from Democrat attorney general candidate Jay Jones surfaced in which he wished death on a Republican rival’s children. (Pool)

    “The enemy is among us, devouring us in Virginia and in America today,” Sears said in a fiery speech. “Jay Jones fantasizes about murdered little children lying lifeless in their mother’s arms. And yet he runs for attorney general, our chief law enforcement officer.”

    The uproar followed the publication of private 2022 text messages in which Jones, then a rising Democrat star, said he hoped former Republican House Speaker Todd Gilbert’s children would die. When challenged, Jones doubled down, saying that such grief might be “a good thing” if it advanced his politics.

    Jones has since apologized, calling the remarks “embarrassing and shameful,” and said he had reached out personally to Gilbert and his family.

    VIRGINIA AG CANDIDATE ONCE REFERENCED PUTTING ‘TWO BULLETS TO THE HEAD’ OF GOP LEADER, TEXTS SHOW

    VA AG Jason Miyares poses for a photo in office

    Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares sits for a portrait in his office in Richmond, Va., Tuesday, May 9, 2023. (Ryan M. Kelly/AP Photo)

    But Virginia Republicans said the damage is irreversible. Miyares, who has served as attorney general since 2022, wrote that as a prosecutor he has “sat with crying victims and grieving families” and heard “the cries of a parent who has lost a child.” He said no one, “least of all a candidate for Virginia’s top law-enforcement office, should ever treat such pain as a political tool.”

    Miyares’ letter put the race’s stakes in plain language. “If you believe it is okay to wish death upon a political opponent — vote for my opponent,” he wrote. “If you believe it is worth the death of children to advance your political goals — vote for my opponent. If you want to give a green light to violent lunatics — vote for my opponent.”

    The attorney general said his own oath of office obligates him to protect every Virginian, “regardless of whether they are a Democrat or Republican.” He added: “I cannot imagine someone running for this job who advocates for violence.”

    Sears broadened her criticism beyond Jones, tying his comments to a culture of what she called Democrat “rage politics.” 

    jay jones speaks from podium

    Virginia attorney general candidate Jerrauld “Jay” Jones speaks at an event in Norfolk, Virginia. (Trevor Metcalfe/The Virginian-Pilot/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

    “The leadership of the Democrat Party is inciting violence as a strategy to win power,” Sears said. She noted that gubernatorial candidate Rep. Abigail Spanberger urged her supporters to “let your rage fill you.”

    “Well, words have meaning,” Sears continued. “Rage is defined as violent, uncontrolled anger.” She warned Virginians to take notice, citing past threats and attacks on Republicans nationwide, from the 2022 attempt on Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s life to school shootings targeting Christians.

    “The unstable pull the triggers,” Sears added, “but they are inspired by the hate tolerated and encouraged by the leadership of the Democrat Party.”

    Both Republicans framed the controversy as a turning point in the 2025 election. 

    “Prior to this week, this race was about competing views on public safety,” Miyares wrote. “Now it’s about basic fitness for public office.”

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    Sears closed her speech with a plea for unity and faith: “As an immigrant, I have seen what happens when leftists destroy the foundations of freedom.” 

    “Let each of us act to protect our beloved Commonwealth of Virginia and the gift from God that is the United States of America,” Sears concluded.

    Fox News Digital did not receive responses on requests for comment from Sears, Miyares or Jones at the time of publication.

    Fox News Digital’s Greg Norman, Danielle Wallace and Charles Creitz contributed to this report. 

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