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Elon Musk declares ‘war’ over perceived death threat by Somali TikToker

Elon Musk poised to return to political spotlight
Former Senate candidate Tiffany Smiley and former Biden White House official Meghan Hays discuss Elon Musk’s suggestion that he will resume funding GOP politicians ahead of the midterms on ‘America Reports.’
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Billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk gave a strong response to a perceived threat on his life by a Somali TikToker after she said on a livestream, «He [is] about to die.»
In a viral livestream posted by a since-deleted account, a Somali TikToker who went by the name «Dowza.z» said in reference to Musk, «I wouldn’t worry too much about him, he about to die.»
Though the streamer switched back and forth from speaking in Somali and English, her statement on Musk was said in English. She was discussing Musk’s recent criticisms of Somali-run businesses engaged in rampant fraud in Minnesota.
The comment prompted immediate backlash from conservatives who took the statement as a threat to Musk’s life.
FBI SURGES RESOURCES TO MINNESOTA AS PATEL CALLS $250M FRAUD SCHEME ‘TIP OF ICEBERG’
Elon Musk looks on in the Oval Office as President Donald Trump meets South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. (AP/Evan Vucci)
Musk himself appeared to take the statement as a threat, responding to the video in an X post in which he wrote, «Then it is war.»
Popular conservative account Libs of TikTok also commented on the clip, saying the FBI «should definitely look into this.»
X account DogeDesigner wrote, «Protect Elon Musk at all costs.»
Conservative commentator Eric Daugherty wrote, «When fraud is exposed – it’s always the fraudsters who yell and complain the loudest. Their THEFT will come to an end.»
Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee posted on his personal X account, «Deport her immediately,» adding, «She shouldn’t be here.»
The Trump administration and lawmakers have launched probes into Minnesota’s «Feeding Our Future» $250 million fraud scheme that allegedly targeted a children’s nutrition program the Department of Agriculture funded and that Minnesota oversaw during the COVID-19 pandemic.
FEDS LAUNCH ‘MASSIVE’ INVESTIGATION AFTER VIRAL VIDEO ALLEGES MINNESOTA DAYCARE FRAUD

Agents with the Department of Homeland Security in a Minneapolis store. The agency on Tuesday said it had launched an operation to identify, arrest and remove criminals who are suspected of fraud. (Department of Homeland Security)
At least 77 people have been charged in that scheme, which took advantage of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s decision to waive certain Federal Child Nutrition Program requirements.
Likewise, another fraud scheme in the state stems from the Housing Stability Services Program, which offered Medicaid coverage for housing stabilization services in an attempt to help those with disabilities, mental illnesses and substance-use disorders receive housing.
The bulk of those charged are part of Minnesota’s Somali population, prompting Trump to announce in November that he was ending the Temporary Protected Status for Somali migrants in Minnesota that offers protection against deportation.
Additionally, the Department of Homeland Security announced Tuesday that it was spearheading a major operation to arrest and remove those involved in the fraud.
GOP LAWMAKER DEMANDS MINNESOTA FRAUD BE TREATED AS ‘ORGANIZED CRIME’ SCHEME

Elon Musk walks along the Colonnade after arriving with President Donald Trump on Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, in Washington. (Alex Brandon/AP Photo)
Musk has been highly vocal about the fraud being uncovered in Minnesota, repeatedly calling attention to it on his official X account, which has over 230 million followers.
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In a post on Saturday, Musk said the fraud scheme going on in Minnesota is «one of many» and that while leading the Department of Government Efficiency under President Donald Trump, his team «found hundreds of fraud schemes.»
«There was massive fraud in every government program, especially Federal funds sent as block grants to the states,» said Musk.
Fox News Digital’s Diana Stancy contributed to this report.
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INTERNACIONAL
Key takeaways from Jack Smith’s testimony to House Judiciary Committee

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Former special counsel Jack Smith used a closed-door deposition with House Republicans last month to defend his investigations into Donald Trump’s alleged effort to subvert the 2020 presidential election and his alleged retention of certain classified documents, using the hours-long testimony to forcefully dispute the notion that his team had acted politically, and citing what he described as ample evidence to support the indictments that had been levied against Trump.
«I made my decisions in the investigation without regard to President Trump’s political association, activities, beliefs, or candidacy in the 2024 presidential election,» Smith told members of the House Judiciary Committee in the Dec. 17 interview.
The interview was Smith’s first time appearing before Congress since he left his role as special counsel in 2024. And while much of the information was not new, the exchange was punctuated by sharp exchanges with Republicans on the panel, both on the strength of the case, and on his own actions taken during the course of the probe — most recently, on the tolling records his team sought from a handful of Republican lawmakers over the course of the investigation. Republicans have assailed the records as being at odds with the speech or debate clause of the Constitution.
«I made my decisions in the investigation without regard to President Trump’s political association, activities, beliefs, or candidacy in the 2024 presidential election,» Smith told the committee. «We took actions based on what the facts, and the law required — the very lesson I learned early in my career as a prosecutor.»
Republicans on the panel ultimately opted to publish the redacted transcript on New Year’s Eve, a decision that may have helped dull the impact of any news the 255-page document may have generated amid the broader hustle and bustle of the holiday season.
Here are some of the biggest moments and notable exchanges from the eight-hour hearing.
TRUMP STRIPS SECURITY CLEARANCES FROM LAW FIRM TIED TO JACK SMITH CASES
Special Counsel Jack Smith arrives to remarks on a recently unsealed indictment including four felony counts against former President Donald Trump in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images) (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
New political tensions
Smith was tapped by former Attorney General Merrick Garland in 2022 to investigate the alleged effort by Trump and his allies to overturn the results of the 2020 election, as well as Trump’s keeping of allegedly classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach after leaving office in 2020. Smith had brought charges against Trump in both cases.
The charges were dropped after Trump’s election, in keeping with a longstanding Justice Department policy that discourages investigating sitting presidents for federal criminal charges, and Smith resigned from his role shortly after.
If nothing else, Smith’s Dec. 17 testimony underscored just how much has changed since Trump’s reelection in 2024.
Trump, for his part, has used his first year back in office to follow through on his promises to go after his perceived political «enemies,» including by revoking security clearances of many individuals, including employees of a D.C.-based law firm that represents Smith, and taking other punitive measures to punish or fire FBI agents involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, investigation.
During his testimony last month, Smith fiercely disputed the notion that Trump’s remarks about the 2020 election results would be protected by the First Amendment.
«Absololutely not,» he said in response to a lawyer for Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee.
The lawyer then ticked through a «long list of disputed elections» in U.S. history and former presidents who have spoken out about «what they believed to be fraud,» or other issues regarding election integrity. «I think you would agree that those types of statements are sort of at the core of the First Amendment rights of a presidential candidate, right?»
«There is no historical analog for what President Trump did in this case,» Smith said immediately.
JACK SMITH SUBPOENAED FOR DEPOSITION WITH HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE

Former President Donald Trump and attorney Todd Blanche return from a lunch break in his trial at Manhattan court in New York on Thursday, April 18, 2024. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via AP, Pool)
‘Powerful’ evidence
Smith told members that the special counsel ultimately gathered evidence against Trump that was, in his view, sufficient to secure a conviction.
«He made false statements to state legislatures, to his supporters in all sorts of contexts and was aware in the days leading up to Jan. 6th that his supporters were angry when he invited them, and then he directed them to the Capitol,» Smith said of Trump’ actions in the run-up to Jan. 6.
«Now, once they were at the Capitol and once the attack on the Capitol happened, he refused to stop it. He instead issued a tweet that, without question in my mind, endangered the life of his own vice president,» Smith added. «And when the violence was going on, he had to be pushed repeatedly by his staff members to do anything to quell it.»
Other possible co-conspirators had not been charged, as Smith noted at one point during the interview.
But Smith said in the testimony that his team had developed «proof beyond a reasonable doubt» that Trump «engaged in a criminal scheme to overturn the results of the 2020 election and to prevent the lawful transfer of power.»
They’d also developed what he described as «powerful evidence» that Trump willfully retained highly classified documents after leaving office in January 2021 at his private Mar-a-Lago residence, and was obstructing the government’s efforts to recover the records.
Smith’s team had not determined how to proceed for possible ‘co-conspirators’
Smith said that, when the special counsel wound down in the wake of the 2024 elections, his team had not determined whether to charge the key Trump allies who may or may not have acted as co-conspirators, including Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell and John Eastman.
«As we stated in the final report, we analyzed the evidence against different co-conspirators,» Smith said. Smith reiterated his allegation that Trump was «the most culpable» and «most responsible» person for the alleged attempts to subvert the 2020 election results.
He said the special counsel had «determined that we did have evidence to charge people at a certain point in time.»
But at the time the investigation was wound down, they had not made «final determinations about that at the time that President Trump won reelection, meaning that our office was going to be closed down.»
FBI OUSTS FORMER ACTING DIRECTOR, AGENT INVOLVED IN J6 PROSECUTIONS, WITH MORE EXPECTED

Former Department of Justice Special Counsel Jack Smith enters a room in the Rayburn House Office Building to give his deposition before the House Judiciary Committee, part of its oversight into DOJ investigations into President Donald Trump, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)
He lamented the ousting of DOJ, FBI officials
Smith used his opening remarks to lament the ousting of FBI agents and Justice Department officials involved in the Jan. 6 investigations.
«I am both saddened and angered that President Trump has sought revenge against career prosecutors, FBI agents, and support staff simply for doing their jobs and for having worked on those cases,» Smith said.
His remarks came after the FBI in recent months ousted a handful of personnel involved in the Jan. 6 investigations, an effort individuals familiar with the action described to Fox News at the time as an act of «retaliation.»
Thousands of FBI personnel in February were forced to fill out a sprawling questionnaire asking employees detailed questions about any role they may have played in the investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riots — ranging from whether they had testified in any criminal trials to when they last participated in investigation-related activity.
FBI AGENTS SUE TRUMP DOJ TO BLOCK ANY PUBLIC IDENTIFICATION OF EMPLOYEES WHO WORKED ON JAN. 6 INVESTIGATIONS
Smith’s team didn’t tell the courts that subpoenaed phone records belonged to lawmakers
Smith was grilled during the deposition about the highly scrutinized subpoenas his team issued to phone companies for data belonging to House and Senate lawmakers as part of his investigation, saying they aligned with the Justice Department’s policy at the time.
Smith said the Public Integrity Section signed off on the subpoenas, a point corroborated by records previously released by Grassley’s office.
Those records also showed that the Public Integrity Section told prosecutors to be wary of concerns lawmakers could raise about the Constitution’s speech or debate clause, which gives Congress members added protections.
The subpoenas to the phone companies were accompanied by gag orders blocking the lawmakers from learning about the existence of the subpoenas for at least one year. Smith said the D.C. federal court, which authorized the gag orders, would not have been aware that they applied to Congress members.»I don’t think we identified that, because I don’t think that was Department policy at the time,» Smith said.
Asked during the deposition about who should be held accountable for lawmakers who felt that the seizure of a narrow set of their phone data was a constitutional violation, Smith said Trump should be held accountable.
«These records are people, in the case of the Senators, Donald Trump directed his co-conspirators to call these people to further delay the proceedings,» Smith said.
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«He chose to do that. If Donald Trump had chosen to call a number of Democratic Senators, we would have gotten toll records for Democratic Senators. So responsibility for why these records, why we collected them, that’s — that lies with Donald Trump,» he said.
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INTERNACIONAL
🔴URGENTE – Trump aseguró que «Nicolás Maduro y su esposa han sido capturados y sacados de Venezuela»

De madrugada se habían denunciado «fuertes explosiones en Venezuela», y a las 6.24 el secretario de Defensa estadounidense Pete Hegseth confirmó que el posteo de Trump sobre «la extracción de Maduro» era real. No hay mayores detalles y Trump habló de una conferencia de prensa mas tarde en Mar a Lago.

Hoy 03:43
«Grandes explosiones» se escucharon esta madrugada en distintas partes de Venezuela, y 6.21 de este sábado 3 de enero de 2026 el presidente estadounidense Donald Trump señaló en sus redes sociales que «hemos exitosamente ejecutado un ataque a gran escala contra Venezuela y su líder, el presidente Nicolás Maduro, quien ha sido junto con su esposa capturado y extraído del país»
Estos hechos conmocionantes ocurren luego que el presidente de Estados Unidos, Donald Trump -quien ya desplegó una considerable fuerza naval en el Caribe- planteara la posibilidad de realizar ataques terrestres contra el gobierno de Nicolás Maduro, e incluso asegurara que los días en el poder del líder chavista «estaban contados».
Imágenes sin verificar subidas a las redes sociales mostraban grandes incendios con columnas de humo, pero sin elementos claros que permitan ubicar con exactitud el sitio de los estallidos, que parecen ocurrir al sur y al este de la ciudad. Según AFP, a las 02H38 (06H38 GMT), pudo sentirse una nueva explosión en Caracas, mientras continuaba el sobrevuelo de aeronaves.
Esto no les gusta a los autoritarios
El ejercicio del periodismo profesional y crítico es un pilar fundamental de la democracia. Por eso molesta a quienes creen ser los dueños de la verdad.
Maduro, en una entrevista que se conoció el jueves pasado, afirmó: «El sistema defensivo nacional ha garantizado y garantiza la integridad territorial, la paz del país y el uso y disfrute de todos nuestros territorios».
Noticia en desarrollo.
INTERNACIONAL
La Diablada de Píllaro: la fiesta de demonios que cada enero reinventa la identidad andina de Ecuador

Cada año, entre el 1 y el 6 de enero, una pequeña ciudad andina del centro de Ecuador se transforma por completo. Las calles de Píllaro, en la provincia de Tungurahua, se llenan de figuras demoníacas de enormes cuernos, máscaras rojas y negras, música estridente y danzas ininterrumpidas que se prolongan durante horas. No se trata de una celebración religiosa en el sentido tradicional ni de un carnaval al uso. Es la Diablada de Píllaro, una de las manifestaciones culturales más singulares del país y, al mismo tiempo, una de las menos conocidas fuera de sus fronteras.
Para un observador extranjero, la escena puede resultar desconcertante: diablos bailando en pleno Año Nuevo, familias enteras disfrazadas, niños y adultos compartiendo el mismo rito, y una comunidad que parece celebrar al demonio. Sin embargo, la Diablada no exalta el mal ni la transgresión religiosa. Al contrario, es una fiesta de identidad, memoria y renovación, profundamente arraigada en la historia local y en las formas de resistencia cultural de los pueblos andinos.
El origen de la Diablada de Píllaro se remonta a la época colonial y está envuelto en varias versiones transmitidas oralmente. Una de las más difundidas sostiene que los indígenas de la zona se disfrazaban de diablos como forma de burla y protesta frente a los abusos de los hacendados y la imposición religiosa española.

Vestirse de demonio era, en ese contexto, una manera simbólica de rechazar el poder colonial y apropiarse de aquello que la Iglesia condenaba. Otra versión atribuye el nacimiento de la tradición a conflictos entre comunidades vecinas, cuando jóvenes pillareños se disfrazaban de diablos para ahuyentar a pretendientes foráneos que cortejaban a las mujeres del pueblo. Más allá de la anécdota, todas las narraciones coinciden en un punto: la Diablada nació como un acto de resistencia y afirmación colectiva.
Con el paso del tiempo, aquella expresión espontánea se convirtió en una celebración estructurada que ha sobrevivido durante más de un siglo. En 2009, el Estado ecuatoriano la declaró Patrimonio Cultural Inmaterial, reconociendo su valor histórico y simbólico.

Desde entonces, lejos de folklorizarse o diluirse, la fiesta ha ganado fuerza y participación, consolidándose como un ritual identitario que atraviesa generaciones.
La Diablada se celebra durante seis días consecutivos, del 1 al 6 de enero. En ese periodo, más de una decena de comunidades rurales y barrios de Píllaro organizan comparsas, conocidas localmente como partidas, que recorren las principales calles del cantón. Cada partida puede reunir entre cientos y miles de participantes. No hay espectadores pasivos: el pueblo entero se involucra, ya sea bailando, tocando música, preparando comida o recibiendo a los visitantes.

El personaje central es el diablo pillareño, fácilmente reconocible por su máscara artesanal. Estas máscaras, elaboradas a mano con papel, engrudo y secadas al sol, se adornan con cuernos y colmillos reales de animales, además de pintura brillante y rasgos exagerados. No hay dos iguales. Cada una es una obra única que puede tardar meses en completarse y que refleja la creatividad de su portador. El traje suele ser rojo, con flecos dorados, capa, medias del mismo color y un látigo que acompaña los movimientos del baile.
Pero la Diablada no es solo de diablos. A su alrededor aparecen otros personajes que completan la escena: las guarichas, hombres disfrazados de mujer que representan la picardía y la abundancia; los capariches, que barren simbólicamente el camino para “limpiar” las malas energías del año anterior; las parejas de línea, que bailan de forma continua y coordinada durante todo el recorrido; y figuras cómicas que interactúan con el público. Cada rol tiene un significado y una función dentro del ritual colectivo.
La música es constante. Bandas populares interpretan ritmos tradicionales andinos como sanjuanitos, albazos y pasacalles, marcando el paso de los bailarines durante horas. El baile no se detiene: es parte esencial del sentido de la fiesta. En la cosmovisión andina, moverse, danzar y hacer ruido es una forma de activar la vida, de espantar la desgracia y de empezar el nuevo ciclo con energía.

Desde el punto de vista simbólico, la Diablada funciona como un rito de renovación. Los participantes “entregan” al diablo las penas, conflictos y frustraciones del año que termina, para iniciar uno nuevo con esperanza. Por eso se celebra en enero, en coincidencia con el calendario cristiano, pero desde una lógica cultural propia, marcada por el sincretismo entre creencias indígenas y tradiciones coloniales.
En las últimas décadas, la Diablada de Píllaro también se ha convertido en un potente atractivo turístico. Miles de visitantes nacionales y extranjeros llegan cada año atraídos por la singularidad del evento. La ciudad alcanza ocupación hotelera plena, los restaurantes y comercios locales incrementan sus ingresos y la fiesta se proyecta como una vitrina cultural del Ecuador andino. Sin embargo, para los pillareños, el turismo es un efecto secundario, no el objetivo principal. La prioridad sigue siendo mantener viva la tradición y transmitirla a las nuevas generaciones.
corresponsal:Desde Quito
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