Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

Obama judge rules on effort to block America 250 events at WH and Lincoln Memorial

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A federal judge on Friday cleared the way for UFC Freedom 250 to proceed at the White House and Lincoln Memorial this weekend, rejecting a last-minute court challenge just days before the high-profile event.

Advertisement

U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta, an Obama appointee, denied an emergency request by two Washington-area residents to halt the mixed martial arts showdown, ruling that the plaintiffs lacked legal standing to sue in the first place and had not demonstrated a sufficient injury.

The lawsuit challenged plans for «UFC Freedom 250,» a mixed martial arts event tied to celebrations surrounding the nation’s 250th anniversary. The event includes a June 12 news conference and fighter face-offs at the Lincoln Memorial and a June 14 fight card on the White House South Lawn. It is expected to bring thousands of viewers.

Construction continues on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., on May 26, 2026, ahead of a UFC match hosted by President Donald Trump to honor the 250th anniversary of the United States.

Advertisement

The plaintiffs argued that the events violate National Park Service regulations governing special events, that the UFC staging ring, known as «The Claw,» erected on the South Lawn lacked congressional authorization, that federal officials failed to conduct environmental review required under the National Environmental Policy Act, and that the government’s actions exceeded its legal authority.

TRUMP ADMIN OFFERS BLUNT ADVICE TO WHITE HOUSE UFC CRITICS AS 11TH-HOUR LAWSUIT LOOMS

Mehta did not decide whether any of those claims were legally valid. Instead, he determined that the plaintiffs’ alleged injuries were largely aesthetic and emotional in nature and did not demonstrate the kind of concrete, personal harm required under Article III of the Constitution. The plaintiffs had described the massive UFC staging structure known as «The Claw» as visually offensive and argued that the «unauthorized, commercial exploitation of the national monuments caused harm.»

Advertisement

Mehta rejected this notion, writing that «general emotional harm, no matter how deeply felt, cannot suffice for injury-in-fact for standing purposes.»

UFC Freedom 250 championship belt displayed inside the Oval Office at the White House

The UFC Freedom 250 championship belt is displayed inside the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., on May 6, 2026. (Scott Taetsch/Zuffa LLC)

Citing precedent from the U.S. Supreme Court, Mehta wrote that a threatened injury must be «certainly impending» to qualify as an injury in fact. He found that one plaintiff’s assertions that he might encounter the event while driving for work were too speculative, while the other plaintiff’s plans to attend protests near the sites did not fit within traditional aesthetic-injury cases.

UFC ANNOUNCES CARD FOR WHITE HOUSE EVENT

Advertisement

«[W]e can find nothing in the existing case law to suggest that a person who incidentally views something unpleasant has suffered an injury-in-fact for purposes of standing,» Mehta ruled.

The ruling noted that President Donald Trump publicly proposed hosting a UFC event at the White House in 2025 and that preparations had been visible for weeks before the lawsuit was filed. According to the opinion, the plaintiffs waited until days before the event to seek emergency relief despite longstanding public knowledge that the event was planned.

Construction on the South Lawn of the White House for UFC Freedom 250 event

Construction continues on the South Lawn of the White House for the Freedom 250 UFC match on June 5, 2026, in Washington, D.C. President Donald Trump is hosting the UFC match on the White House grounds to honor the 250th anniversary of the United States. (Kevin Carter/Getty Images)

Mehta also emphasized the temporary nature of the disputed structures and activities. Construction associated with the event is scheduled to be dismantled shortly after the fight card concludes.

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

The opinion cited nearly a year of planning, extensive coordination among federal agencies, the involvement of hundreds of workers and contractors, and an estimated $60 million investment by UFC and affiliated organizations.

The ruling also referenced the expected attendance of thousands of spectators and the anticipated remote audience of millions.

Advertisement

federal judges, white house, america 250, washington, ufc, politics

Advertisement

INTERNACIONAL

‘You failed your son first’: Howard prof blames father’s values after Karmelo Anthony murdered his son

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A Howard University professor tore into the victim-impact statement delivered by the father of slain Texas teen Austin Metcalf, arguing that the teen’s death «did not begin with the knife» wielded by Karmelo Anthony but instead that his father’s parenting style was to be blamed as well.

Advertisement

Dr. Stacey Patton, a professor at Howard University’s School of Communications, penned an opinion piece titled «Dear Jeff Metcalf: Your Son Is Dead Because You Failed to Teach Him That Black Boys Have Boundaries» to Substack on Wednesday on Substack, where she insinuated Anthony was acting out of self-defense.

«YOU failed to teach your boy that Black children have boundaries,» Patton wrote. «YOU failed teach humility, restraint, or the sacred fact that another person’s body is not your jurisdiction. YOU failed to teach him that another child’s space is not a challenge to be conquered. YOU failed to teach him that «community» does not mean white boys get to decide who belongs and who does not.»

Patton’s piece was published a day after Anthony was sentenced to 35 years in prison for the murder of Metcalf. The case drew national after now 19-year-old Anthony stabbed 17-year-old Metcalf in the heart during a confrontation at a high school track meeting in April 2025. The case has become a flashpoint in broader debates about race, with Anthony’s supporters arguing he has been treated differently because he is Black, while critics have rejected efforts to make the murder of Metcalf, a white teenager, about race.

Advertisement

GRIEVING TEXAS FATHER SPEAKS OUT AFTER SON WAS STABBED TO DEATH AT HIGH SCHOOL TRACK MEET

Left: Austin Metcalf is pictured. Right: Karmelo Anthony is pictured in a mugshot after being taken into custody following his murder conviction. (Jeff Metcalf; Collin County Sheriff’s Office)

«YOU obviously failed to teach your son that touching, confronting, crowding, testing, or policing another person can have consequences,» Patton wrote. «And YOU failed to teach him that the same world that cheers white boys for being bold and aggressive will not always be there to save them when they mistake somebody else’s restraint for permission.»

Advertisement

She blasted Jeff for saying that Anthony had failed his parents in his decision to murder his son.

«It is easier to stand in a courtroom and call Karmelo Anthony a failure than it is to admit that Austin’s death did not begin with the knife,» Patton wrote. «It began with every lesson that told your son that he had the right to approach, challenge, and cross a boundary. It began with every adult who smiled at white boy entitlement and called it leadership. It began with every cultural script that taught him Black boys are the ones to be feared, but never taught him that Black boys might also be afraid.

AMERICA STILL CAN’T PUT DOWN THE RACE CARD. AND IT’S THE SHAME OF OUR NATION

Advertisement
Jeff Metcalf speaking at a podium during a public event.

Jeff Metcalf speaks about the stabbing death of his son, Austin Metcalf, at a high school track meet. (Jeff Metcalf)

She also alleged that Jeff’s victim-impact statement was rooted in racism, homing in on Jeff saying that Anthony does «not belong» in the community because of what he did.

«You don’t belong in this community» is not just a father’s grief spilling over,» Patton wrote. «It is a declaration of removal. And it is the language of somebody who believes he has the authority to decide who gets to stay, who must disappear, and whose presence contaminates the social order. Like father, like son.»

«Your words landed on top of centuries of Black children being told they do not belong in white schools, neighborhoods, playgrounds, pools, churches, white juries, white imaginations, and white definitions of innocence,» Patton continues. «They landed on top of every Black boy this country has turned into a threat before he ever had a chance to be a child.»

Advertisement

AUSTIN METCALF’S FAMILY HIT WITH DEATH THREATS AS KARMELO ANTHONY SUPPORTERS FACE VIOLENCE ALLEGATIONS

She claimed that his son was not the only victim in this case and that Anthony’ family was also grieving.

Jeff Metcalf standing with his son Austin Metcalf outdoors

Jeff Metcalf stands with his son Austin Metcalf, a junior at Memorial High School in Frisco, who was stabbed in the chest at a track meet, allegedly by 17-year-old Karmelo Anthony from Frisco Centennial High School. (Courtesy Jeff Metcalf)

«Austin is dead. Your family is devastated,» Patton wrote. «That matters. Karmelo Anthony is alive but caged inside a racial imagination that had already convicted him. And that matters, too. Two families are shattered. And a whole country is using the tragedy to rehearse the same old script about Black guilt and white innocence.»

Advertisement

In a statement to Fox News Digital, Patton defended her opinion piece as a «critique of racial power» and said that she was not, «blaming a dead child, attacking a grieving father, excusing violence, and rejecting the legal system.»

«My argument is simple: Black children are children,» Patton said. «They do not become monsters because white America needs one, and their humanity is not up for debate because a verdict has been rendered.»

«Now, run along and feed your propaganda machine,» she added, declining to answer several of Fox News Digital’s questions. «I’m sure it’s hungry for another Black woman’s words to mutilate. That is my statement.»

Advertisement

Fox News Digital reached out to Howard University and Metcalf’s family for comment.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Patton’s Substack piece is the latest in a growing chorus of voices arguing that the murder case is rooted in race.

Advertisement

Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, questioned on her podcast whether Karmelo Anthony’s race played a role in his conviction. Crockett asked whether Anthony received a fair trial, spreading a false claim that all jurors were white and that could have impacted their ability to be impartial.

«I’m not necessarily convinced — not that I could tell you the name of one person on this jury — that we had 12 impartial white folk out of Collin County sitting on a jury for this young black man,» Crockett said.

Crocket also suggested black mothers have faced far greater agony on a day-to-day basis than the victim’s family.

Advertisement

«Black women, especially black women who have black male children, live in fear and agony every single day,» she lamented. «A fear and agony that I promise you the Metcalfs probably had never spend a day living that way.»

politics, parents, trials, homicide, campus controversy, crime

Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Quién era el Niño Guerrero, el líder del grupo criminal venezolano Tren de Aragua que murió en un operativo militar de EE.UU.

Published

on


Héctor Rusthenford Guerrero Flores, conocido como el Niño Guerrero, fue durante más de una década el rostro temido del Tren de Aragua, la banda criminal venezolana que sembró terror en América latina y extendió sus tentáculos hasta Estados Unidos y Europa.

Este viernes, su historia terminó de manera abrupta: el presidente estadounidense Donald Trump confirmó que fuerzas del Comando Sur lo mataron en una operación “rápida y letal” en territorio venezolano.

Advertisement

Según detalló Trump, el operativo contó con la colaboración de “amigos de Venezuela” y puso fin a la carrera del hombre que, desde 2025, figuraba en la lista de sancionados del Departamento del Tesoro de EE.UU . Para Washington, el Tren de Aragua ya no era solo una pandilla: lo consideraban una organización terrorista extranjera y una amenaza directa para la seguridad regional.

Así lo comunicó en una publicación en la red Truth Social, en la que también compartió un video de diez segundos. Las imágenes tomadas desde una vista aérea muestran la explosión de un edificio con el techo de color verde, donde habría estado el criminal.

Las imágenes del ataque al lider del cartel narco El Tren de Aragua. (Video: Truth Social).

Advertisement

“Los terroristas del Tren de Aragua ya no tienen refugio seguro en Venezuela ni en ningún otro lugar y, bajo mi liderazgo, encontraremos a estos despiadados asesinos y narcotraficantes en cualquier momento y lugar, los enviaremos al infierno, donde pertenecen”, escribió Trump.

Venezuela confirmó poco después que Héctor Rusthenford Guerrero Flores había sido “neutralizado” y que hubo “enfrentamientos” con integrantes de “estructuras de delincuencia organizada”.

De la cárcel de Tocorón al dominio criminal internacional

El Niño Guerrero forjó su imperio criminal desde el Centro Penitenciario de Aragua, más conocido como la cárcel de Tocorón.

Advertisement

Pero su vida allí distaba mucho de la de un preso común. Según investigaciones de la periodista Ronna Rísquez, el penal tenía piscina, zoológico, campo de béisbol, sala de apuestas, banco, puestos de comida y hasta una discoteca llamada “Tokio”, donde se presentaban artistas famosos.

"Niño Guerrero" era el líder del cartel narcoterrorista Tren de Aragua. (Foto: El País)

«Niño Guerrero» era el líder del cartel narcoterrorista Tren de Aragua. (Foto: El País)

Desde ese lugar, Guerrero Flores manejaba el Tren de Aragua con mano de hierro. Impuso el cobro de la “causa”, una cuota semanal que debían pagar los más de 5000 reclusos para sostener la infraestructura del penal y el nivel de vida de los líderes.

Se estima que ese sistema de extorsión generaba unos 3,5 millones de dólares al año. Quienes no pagaban sufrían castigos brutales: violencia, privación de alimentos o dormir a la intemperie.

Advertisement

La impunidad era tal que, según Rísquez, el Niño Guerrero salía de la cárcel cuando quería, con la complicidad de las autoridades. Incluso, se lo vio navegando en yate por las playas venezolanas.

La cárcel tenía desde un boliche hasta una pileta. (Foto: X/@runrunesweb).

La cárcel tenía desde un boliche hasta una pileta. (Foto: X/@runrunesweb).

Según el centro de análisis Insight Crime, «Niño Guerrero“, que tendría 42 años, convirtió el grupo “en lo que es hoy durante su encarcelamiento en Tocorón”.

El salto a la “multinacional del crimen”

Bajo el mando de Guerrero Flores, el Tren de Aragua dejó de ser una banda local para convertirse en una organización criminal transnacional. La crisis migratoria venezolana fue la herramienta utilizada por la organización para extenderse por Sudamérica.

Advertisement

En los últimos años llevó sus operaciones a Colombia, Perú, Chile, Brasil, México, España y Estados Unidos.

Sus delitos iban desde el narcotráfico y la trata de personas con fines de explotación sexual, hasta secuestros, homicidios, lavado de dinero con criptomonedas y tráfico de armas.

La Justicia estadounidense lo acusaba de actuar en coordinación con el Cártel de los Soles, una red de narcotráfico integrada, según Washington, por altos funcionarios venezolanos. En el Distrito Sur de Nueva York, lo señalaron como facilitador del envío de toneladas de cocaína a EE.UU.

Advertisement

La fuga de Tocorón y la caída final

La aparente impunidad del Niño Guerrero quedó en evidencia en septiembre de 2023, cuando 11.000 efectivos venezolanos intervinieron la cárcel de Tocorón.

Sin embargo, el líder criminal escapó antes del operativo a través de una red de túneles de cinco kilómetros que desembocaba en el lago de Valencia. La fuga alimentó las sospechas de complicidad estatal.

Desde entonces, Guerrero Flores permanecía prófugo, con órdenes de captura en varios países y recompensas millonarias ofrecidas por gobiernos como el de Perú.

Advertisement

El Departamento de Estado de EE.UU . ofrecía desde julio de 2024 hasta 5 millones de dólares por información que permitiera su captura.

En la Argentina, y sieguiendo la política de Trump, el gobierno de Javier Milei declaró al Tren de Aragua como organización terrorista en febrero de 2025. “La organización Tren de Aragua representa una amenaza seria y multifacética para la seguridad nacional”, argumentó el decreto firmado por el Presidente.

Venezuela, Narcotráfico, narcos

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Woman airlifted to hospital with serious injuries after shark attack at popular Sydney beach

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A 30-year-old woman was rushed to a hospital Saturday with serious injuries after being attacked by a shark at a Sydney beach, the latest in a string of recent shark attacks off Australia’s coast.

Advertisement

Officials said emergency crews responded to Coogee Beach on Saturday morning following reports that a swimmer had been bitten.

The woman was airlifted to a hospital for treatment, police said in a statement.

«The woman was pulled from ⁠the water by members of the public who commenced ​first aid,» police said.

Advertisement

AUSTRALIAN TEENAGER DIES IN DEVASTATING SHARK ATTACK, NEARLY 100 YARDS FROM POPULAR BEACH: REPORT

Police and emergency personnel at the scene after reports of a shark attack at Coogee Beach in Sydney, Australia, June 13, 2026. (REUTERS/Hollie Adams)

Authorities said she suffered serious injuries to her arm and leg.

Advertisement

Coogee Beach and two nearby beaches were closed following the attack.

The incident comes amid a recent series of fatal shark attacks across Australia.

SHARK ATTACK DEATHS SURGE ABOVE DECADE AVERAGE IN 2025

Advertisement
A lifeguard and a NSW Police boat patrol Coogee Beach following a shark attack in Sydney, Australia, June 13, 2026.

A lifeguard and a NSW Police boat patrol Coogee Beach following a shark attack in Sydney, Australia, June 13, 2026. (REUTERS/Hollie Adams)

Last week, officials said a 35-year-old fisherman was killed by a suspected shark measuring nearly 15 feet long off the coast of Western Australia.

The man was spearfishing near Michaelmas Island, a protected sand cay near Albany.

On May 24, 39-year-old Michael Jensz was killed after suffering fatal injuries during a suspected bull shark attack while spearfishing along the Great Barrier Reef.

Advertisement

‘LARGE SHARK’ KILLS MAN AT AUSTRALIAN BEACH, WITH WITNESS DESCRIBING HEARING SCREAMS OF ‘DON’T BITE ME!’

Lifeguards erect a sign that says

Lifeguards erect a sign that says «Beach Closed» following a shark attack at Coogee Beach in Sydney, Australia, June 13, 2026 (REUTERS/Hollie Adams)

Just days earlier, on May 16, 38-year-old Steve Mattabonni was killed in a suspected great white shark attack near Rottnest Island, a popular tourist destination off Western Australia.

Earlier this year, a 12-year-old also died following a shark attack in Sydney Harbour.

Advertisement

Dozens of beaches along Australia’s east coast were temporarily closed in January after four shark attacks were reported over a two-day period.

Officials said heavy rain had created murky water conditions that may have attracted sharks while reducing visibility.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement
Police and emergency personnel at the scene after reports of a shark attack at Coogee Beach in Sydney, Australia, June 13, 2026.

Police and emergency personnel at the scene after reports of a shark attack at Coogee Beach in Sydney, Australia, June 13, 2026. (REUTERS/Hollie Adams)

Australia averages about 20 shark attacks each year, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.

Fox News Digital’s Brie Stimson and Reuters contributed to this report.



australia regions, sharks, odd news, australia, beach

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Tendencias