Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
These Twitter photos show a giant inflatable chicken resembling President Donald Trump behind the White House in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2017. These Twitter photos show a giant inflatable chicken resembling President Donald Trump behind the White House in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2017.
Several sources report that former U.S. president Bill Clinton, ex-secretary of state Hillary Clinton, their daughter Chelsea and their two grandchildren will be staying at the Manoir Hovey. Radio-Canada is reporting the U.S. Secret Service came by last week to inspect the property along the shores of Lake Massawippi in advance of their arrival Sunday.
After Kathy Griffin was photographed in May holding a fake bloodied, severed head of Donald Trump, a ferocious backlash ensued, and the comedian lost gigs and was subject to a Secret Service investigation. "I am no longer under federal investigation," she tweeted Friday.
By just about any measure, the Transportation Security Administration has been a failure. A recent undercover test provides even further evidence of this, as if any were needed.
The Belleville News-Democrat reports that Joseph Lynn Pickett of Edwardsville was charged June 15 with threatening the president of the United States. U.S. Secret Service Special Agent Vincent Pescitelli says in a criminal complaint that Pickett "did knowingly and wilfully make a threat to take the life of, to kidnap, and to inflict bodily harm" against Trump on Facebook.
"I'm getting all of these hateful messages," said O'Grady, "and they started turning from, 'You should be fired,' to more along the lines of, 'You're completely unpatriotic and you don't deserve your position,' and started getting kind of nasty." O'Grady, a communications professor at New York University, scanned her social media profiles trying to make sense of the messages pouring in and quickly uncovered why she was being targeted.
Cavirin Systems, Inc., offering continuous security assessment and remediation for hybrid clouds, containers and data centers through correlated risk scoring, announced today a security advisory board consisting of luminaries from across the industry, coming together to solve customer challenges and educate organizations about cybersecurity risks. Initial members include Robert Rodriguez, the chairman and founder of SINET, and Izak Mutlu, the former CISO of Robert Rodriguez is the chairman and founder of SINET , whose mission is to advance innovation and enable global collaboration between the public and private sectors to defeat cybersecurity threats.
You wouldn't have noticed it unless you knew where - and how - to look, but the top-secret National Security Agency document leaked to the Intercept and published Monday contained a clue that may have led authorities to its source. Spread throughout the pages were barely visible yellow dots, each less than a millimeter in diameter, repeated over and over in the same rectangular pattern.
Kathy Griffin is fighting back against the abuse and "death threats" she has received in light of controversial images released earlier this week that showed the comedian holding up a bloody head resembling that of President Donald Trump. In a news conference on Friday, a Griffin's attorney Lisa Bloom accused Trump and his family of "using their power to target her."
" The tip received by police was vague, but potentially dire: a Pennsylvania physician was on his way to the nation's capital with a carload of weapons, planning to visit the president. As a result, Bryan Moles, 43, of Edinboro, Pennsylvania, was arrested on weapons charges after checking in to the Trump International Hotel in Washington, a few blocks from the White House.
The US Secret Service said late on Tuesday that it had lifted a security lockdown put into effect at the White House after a person tried to jump over a bike rack used as a barrier along the north fence of the mansion where President Donald Trump lives and works. WASHINGTON: The US Secret Service said late on Tuesday that it had lifted a security lockdown put into effect at the White House after a person tried to jump over a bike rack used as a barrier along the north fence of the mansion where President Donald Trump lives and works.
The bipartisan spending agreement from Congress scheduled to be approved this week reportedly sets aside more than $120 million to alleviate the financial burden on agencies tasked with protecting President Donald Trump and his family. About $60 million will be allocated to the US Secret Service, which requested the additional funds for expenses that include costs for Trump's security detail and protecting Trump Tower in New York City, according to a New York Times report that cited the legislation.
Watchdog groups are suing the Trump administration , this time for failure to disclose records of visitors to the White House and to President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago and Trump Tower residences. The lawsuit, filed Monday in New York federal court by Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility in Washington , the non-profit the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, charges that the Secret Service-which maintains White House visitor logs-has refused to turn them over in response to Freedom of Information Act requests.
The U.S. Secret Service requested $60 million in additional funding for the next year, offering the most precise estimate yet of the escalating costs for travel and protection resulting from the unusually complicated lifestyle of the Trump family, according to internal agency documents reviewed by The Washington Post. Nearly half of the additional money, $26.8 million, would pay to protect President Trump's family and private home in New York's Trump Tower, the documents show, while $33 million would be spent on travel costs incurred by "the president, vice president and other visiting heads of state."
An Oklahoma state senator busted for child prostitution after he was found in a motel room with a teenage boy will resign by Wednesday night, his lawyer said. Sen. Ralph Shortey has faced pressure to step down following his arrest earlier this month.
An intruder carrying a backpack was arrested after scaling a fence around the White House and entering the grounds, the U.S. Secret Service said on Saturday, in the latest breach of security at the president's official residence. President Donald Trump was inside the White House when the male suspect climbed over the fence on the complex's South Grounds at 11:38 p.m. on Friday, and uniformed officers arrested him, the Secret Service said in a statement.
President Donald Trump said Saturday that the U.S. Secret Service did a "phenomenal job" apprehending a "troubled person" who got onto the White House grounds after climbing a fence on the east side of the property while Trump was inside the executive mansion. The Secret Service said in a statement that the individual, whom it did not identify, was arrested on the south grounds without further incident after climbing an outer perimeter fence near the Treasury Department and East Executive Avenue at about 11:38 p.m. Friday.
Time marches on, with a bit more skip this weekend, as daylight saving time officially re-emerges at 2 a.m. Federal judges have dealt Texas another loss over voting rights, finding that Republicans racially gerrymandered some congressional districts to weaken the electoral influence of the state's booming minority... Federal judges have dealt Texas another loss over voting rights, finding that Republicans racially gerrymandered some congressional districts to weaken the electoral influence of the state's booming minority population. A district attorney says two assistant prosecutors no longer work for him after a report by The Associated Press about abuse at a North Carolina church where they are members.
A legislative panel on Tuesday signed off on the state Department of Human Services' proposal to hire a veteran U.S. Secret Service agent as its chief of security and compliance for $106,919 a year.
The U.S. Secret Service paid at least $63,700 in a series of payments to President Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla., according to a new report. The expenses were designated as hotel costs and documents reveal that the payments, most of which were made between February and April as Trump made frequent visits to the club.