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Fox News Politics Newsletter: Biden Chief of Staff OK’d Autopen Pardons, Email Reveals

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Welcome to the Fox News Politics newsletter, with the latest updates on the Trump administration, Capitol Hill and more Fox News politics content. Here’s what’s happening…

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– Trump’s whirlwind week ahead to include meeting with NATO chief, ‘major’ announcement on Russia

– UK to roll out red carpet in ‘unprecedented’ second Trump visit hosted by King Charles

– Democrats seize on Epstein files drama with new transparency calls

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Top Biden Aide Gave OK for 11th Hour Autopen Pardons, Email Reveals

Former President Joe Biden’s chief of staff issued final approval for multiple high-profile preemptive pardons during Biden’s final days in office, according to a new report. 

Biden’s alleged use of the autopen has become a sticking point for months, as President Donald Trump has said thousands of pardons Biden signed were void and claimed that the former president did not know what documents he was signing through the automated device. 

Biden issued a series of preemptive pardons on his final day to officials, including former chief medical advisor to the president Anthony Fauci and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, in an attempt to safeguard them from retribution from Trump… READ MORE.

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Then-President Joe Biden signs a proclamation establishing Chuckwalla National Monument, at the White House in Washington, U.S., Jan. 14, 2025.  (REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

White House

FAITH MEETS FORTUNE: Trump gathers CEOs for unprecedented faith, economy meeting to renew US ‘spiritually and financially’

PUTIN’S RECKONING: Trump’s whirlwind week ahead to include meeting with NATO chief, ‘major’ announcement on Russia

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‘GOD ALONE SAVED ME’: Trump says ‘American spirit’ triumphs over ‘forces of evil’ on anniversary of Butler assassination attempt

CLOCK TICKING: Mother of slain soldier held by Hamas terrorists for 4,000 days makes plea to Trump

Rubio with relatives of Hamas hostages

Relatives of hostages still held in Gaza, Anthony Rubio, Moshe Lavi, Tzur Goldin, Iair Horn and Ilay David meet with Secretary of State Marco Rubio on June 28, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (The Hostages and Missing Families Forum)

PROJECT UNDERWATER: Navy delays next-gen submarine to 2040, threatening US sea power

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NO CUTS AHEAD: Trump urges rate cuts to boost savings, but Fed says economy is strong

DEAL OR TARIFFS: Trump, Rutte announce ‘really big’ NATO arms package amid new 50 day deadline to Putin

World Stage

‘NATO IS PAYING’: Trump says US will send Patriot missiles to Ukraine, adding Putin ‘talks nice and then he bombs’

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SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP: UK to roll out red carpet in ‘unprecedented’ second Trump visit hosted by King Charles

Trump and then-Prince Charles in 2019

From June 2019, Britain’s then-Prince Charles, Prince of Wales (L) walks with US President Donald Trump during an event to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings, in Portsmouth, southern England. (JEFF J MITCHELL/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

‘BLOOD COVENANT’: Iranian crowdfunding campaign claims to raise $40M as reward for assassinating Trump

ALLIES ON NOTICE: Pentagon presses Japan, Australia on role in possible Taiwan conflict

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Capitol Hill

‘PUT UP’: Democrats seize on Epstein files drama with new transparency calls

‘TRUE WARRIOR’: FIRST ON FOX: ‘A true warrior’: Retiring Rep Mark Green endorses his potential replacement in GOP race

Mark Green sits in committee

House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mark Green, R-Tenn., arrives to begin the impeachment of Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas over the crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border, Jan. 30, 2024, at the Capitol in Washington.  (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

Across America 

TRADE TIDE TURNS: From cattle to crude: How Trump’s tariffs are rattling the Lone Star State

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CASH AMID CHAOS: Hochul hauls in big bucks amid lackluster poll numbers and calls to endorse Mamdani

‘FIVE-ALARM WARNING’: Mamdani’s failure to walk back these positions could cause reckoning in Democratic Party: ‘Five-alarm warning’

QUIET EXIT: Jeffrey Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell’s secluded hideout hits the market

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‘HAD A GREAT TIME’: Newsom, Vance exchange jabs over immigration after VP’s California vacation: ‘Hope you enjoy your family time’

ARMED AND DANGEROUS: Suspect wanted in anti-ICE Texas ambush previously sued in past protest incident

Get the latest updates on the Trump administration and Congress, exclusive interviews and more on FoxNews.com.

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New York Attorney General Letitia James enters plea in federal mortgage fraud case

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New York Attorney General Letitia James was arraigned at a federal court in Norfolk, Virginia, Friday, where she pleaded not guilty to two felony charges of bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution.

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The charges against James stem from her 2020 purchase of a home in Norfolk, Virginia. Prosecutors allege that James misled a bank about the nature of the residence in order to obtain more favorable loan conditions.

The indictment states that James misrepresented the financial institution in claiming it would be her secondary residence, and instead rented it out to a family. 

According to the indictment, the lower interest rate would allow James to save nearly $19,000 over the course of the 30-year loan.

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LETITIA JAMES TO BE ARRAIGNED IN VIRGINIA ON FEDERAL BANK FRAUD CHARGES TIED TO 2020 HOME PURCHASE

NY AG Letitia James and President Donald Trump (Getty Images)

James entered the not guilty plea herself to U.S. District Judge Jamar K. Walker. 

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She is being represented in the case by defense attorney Abbe Lowell, and by Andrew Bosse, a former assistant U.S. attorney based in Norfolk who formerly headed up the office’s criminal division. 

James’ arraignment is the latest in a string of prosecutions brought against the president’s perceived political foes, despite objections from career prosecutors — some of whom have since been fired or resigned.

James, a Democrat, has long-drawn Trump’s ire after she campaigned for attorney general in 2016 largely on vows to investigate Trump’s actions and businesses.

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She also successfully secured a $450 million civil fraud case against him last year, though an appeals court later tossed the financial penalty portion of the case. 

«This is nothing more than a continuation of the president’s desperate weaponization of our justice system,» James said in a statement after she was indicted. 

DOJ SEEKS REMOVAL OF COMEY’S DEFENSE LAWYER, CITING CONFLICT OF INTEREST

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Trump talks in the Oval Office

Trump denies B1 bombers flew toward Venezuela amid cartel threats. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

«These charges are baseless, and the president’s own public statements make clear that his only goal is political retribution at any cost,» she added.

Her indictment, like the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey, was presented to a grand jury by former White House aide Lindsey Halligan, whom President Donald Trump installed as the acting U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia last month. 

Trump, in September, said he would install Halligan as the top prosecutor for the Eastern District of Virginia, replacing interim attorney Erik Siebert, who resigned under pressure to indict both Comey and James.

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«No one is above the law. The charges as alleged in this case represent intentional, criminal acts and tremendous breaches of the public’s trust,» Halligan said in a statement. «The facts and the law in this case are clear, and we will continue following them to ensure that justice is served.»

After the arraignment, it is likely that she will file a motion to dismiss her case for vindictive and selective prosecution, following similar steps taken by Comey’s legal team in Alexandria earlier this week. 

She will also file a motion to dismiss her case based on what her lawyers will argue was the unlawful appointment of Halligan in securing her indictment. 

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Lowell, her attorney, has described the case against her as «improper political retribution,» and vowed they would «fight these charges in every process allowed in the law.»

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to Fox News’s request for comment on the case, or whether Halligan or Keller would be joined by any other federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of Virginia.  

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Speaking to reporters outside the court on Friday, James said the Justice Department is being used as a tool of «revenge,» and a «vehicle of retribution.»

«But my faith is strong,» she told the group that had massed outside the courthouse in Norfolk, Virginia, hours earlier. «I have a belief in the justice system.»

«Never cow down or break or bend. So there is no fear today,» she said. «I will not be deterred.»

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Judge Walker set a trial date for Jan. 26, 2026, and ordered parties to appear back in court for motions hearings in early December.

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Robo al Louvre: hallan 150 pruebas de ADN y logran rastrear la ruta que tomaron los ladrones

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Los detectives trabajan en silencio en la búsqueda de las Joyas de la Corona, robadas el domingo pasado en el Museo del Louvre en París y con un valor de 88 millones de euros. Nada se ha encontrado oficialmente, pero la fiscal de París, Laure Beccuau, anunció la toma de más de 150 muestras de ADN, papilares y otros rastros tras el robo. Expresó «una pequeña esperanza» y se mostró optimista sobre el progreso de la investigación.

Los análisis «requieren plazos, aunque sean una prioridad para los laboratorios», explicó Laure Beccuau. Las «respuestas en los próximos días» podrían abrir «vías, especialmente si los autores estaban registrados», añadió.

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La fiscal explicó que la videovigilancia «permitió seguir» la ruta de los autores «en París y los departamentos vecinos». Citó también «imágenes disponibles de cámaras públicas y privadas (autopistas, bancos, comercios…)» para su explotación, que la policía se niega a revelar.

El museo del Louvre de París, el más visitado del mundo. Foto: EFE

Es su deseo «arrestar a los autores lo antes posible para recuperar las joyas, antes de que les quiten las piedras y fundan los metales».

La cobertura mediática internacional de este robo organizado podría limitar los movimientos de las joyas o su desmantelamiento por el momento, según la fiscal.

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Un ruido enorme

Una guardia del Louvre, que estuvo presente en la Galería Apolo durante el espectacular robo del domingo, relató y reconstruyó el robo.

«Era un domingo muy tranquilo», recordó en una entrevista con la radio France Inter, cuando «de repente, oímos un ruido enorme, completamente inusual. Un ruido sordo, casi metálico». «Nadie puede estar preparado para eso», añadió la guardia, que prefirió permanecer en el anonimato.

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Ladrones saliendo del Louvre

Se encontraba con otros empleados en la galería en el momento del asalto. Con sus compañeros, esta guardia «muy experimentada», según la emisora ​​de radio, relató haber entrado en la galería y haber visto a «dos visitantes aterrorizados», antes de ver a «uno de los delincuentes darse vuelta con algo que me pareció una motosierra».

Entonces gritó a sus compañeros que «¡salieran!». Uno de ellos dio la alarma por radio y los visitantes fueron evacuados.

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Los ladrones habían entrado al museo rompiendo el vidrio con una amoladora, vía un montacargas robado, colocado en la vereda frente al río Sena. En 3 minutos destrozaron las vidrieras que contenían las joyas, dos se les cayeron y huyeron por la misma vía, abandonando muchos materiales en el piso de la Galería de Apolo.

Cómo ocurrió el robo al Louvre

«Creo que, en retrospectiva, nos habría parecido increíble que alguien pudiera forzar esas vitrinas», contó la guardia. «Nunca pensamos ni por un segundo que existiera tal riesgo».

¿Un robo con plan frustrado?

Otro guardia de seguridad privado, también de servicio el domingo, relató haber visto huir a los delincuentes y fue quien descubrió la corona de la emperatriz Eugenia caída, cerca del camión Mitsubishi. Al llegar justo cuando los ladrones se marchaban en sus motos, notó un «fuerte olor a gasolina».

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«Habían perforado el depósito de su camión. Había un soplete cerca, y era obvio que planeaban incendiarlo«, declaró. Fue él quien entonces vio un objeto caído al suelo: «Le dije a la policía: ‘Miren, hay algo ahí abajo. Era la corona de la emperatriz Eugenia‘».

Un robo que duró pocos minutos y generó un beneficio estimado de 88 millones de euros. Cuatro días después del robo en el Louvre, los delincuentes siguen prófugos. Pero ¿realmente lograron el robo? El guardia de seguridad privado cree que el robo no salió como los ladrones hubiesen soñado. Debieron escapar apresuradamente.

Afirmó haber llegado «justo cuando los delincuentes huían en una moto». Cree que su plan fue «frustrado». «Porque nunca habrían dejado semejante evidencia», argumentó, refiriéndose a la corona de Eugenia, encontrada por los investigadores, tras ser abandonada por los ladrones y su camión con más pertenencias y huellas.

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Fue este mismo guardia de seguridad quien avistó la corona por primera vez. «Recuerdo haberle dicho a la policía: ‘Miren, hay algo ahí abajo, y probablemente sea un objeto que se cayó’», relató. «No estaba saltando de alegría», porque «el objeto había sufrido».

La presidenta del Louvre, Laurence des Cars, reveló que la corona de la emperatriz Eugenia estaba «bastante dañada». Según los hallazgos iniciales, «es posible una restauración delicada, aunque obviamente debemos ser cautelosos», declaró durante su audiencia en el Senado. «Es historia francesa la que fue robada”, dijo.

Este guardia de seguridad, que encontró la corona, se encontraba bajo la pirámide de cristal del Louvre cuando le informaron del robo por radio. Corrió a la Galería Apolo con otros compañeros y llegó al lugar dos minutos después.

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«Tenía una linterna metálica en la mano y pensé que tendría que defenderme», recuerda.

Demasiados robos en el museo

El espectacular robo en el Louvre del 19 de octubre reveló una realidad que muchos fingían ignorar: los museos, lejos de ser inviolables, se han convertido en blanco de la delincuencia en Francia.

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La clase política estaba alarmada por las fallas en los sistemas de seguridad. Sin embargo, este robo es solo la culminación de una epidemia de allanamientos que se ha estado desarrollando en medio de una indiferencia casi general durante varios años. Los años 2010-2020 fueron agitados para los museos franceses y europeos, con una serie de ataques de una gravedad sin precedentes.

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US kills 6 suspected narco-terrorists in overnight strike on alleged drug smuggling boat, Hegseth says

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President Donald Trump directed a nighttime U.S. strike on a suspected Tren de Aragua vessel in the Caribbean Sea, killing six alleged narco-terrorists, officials say.

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«Overnight, at the direction of President Trump, the Department of War carried out a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel operated by Tren de Aragua (TdA), a Designated Terrorist Organization (DTO), trafficking narcotics in the Caribbean Sea,» War Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on X sharing an accompanying video of the strike. «The vessel was known by our intelligence to be involved in illicit narcotics smuggling, was transiting along a known narco-trafficking route, and carrying narcotics.» 

«Six male narco-terrorists were aboard the vessel during the strike, which was conducted in international waters — and was the first strike at night,» he said. «All six terrorists were killed and no U.S. forces were harmed in this strike.»

HEGSETH SAYS US CONDUCTED ANOTHER STRIKE IN EASTERN PACIFIC TARGETING ALLEGED NARCO-TRAFFICKERS

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This infrared image released by the Department of War shows a suspected Tren de Aragua vessel in international waters of the Caribbean Sea before a U.S. nighttime strike that killed six alleged narco-terrorists, officials said. (Department of War/Pete Hegseth)

Hegseth further warned, «If you are a narco-terrorist smuggling drugs in our hemisphere, we will treat you like we treat [al Qaeda]. Day or NIGHT, we will map your networks, track your people, hunt you down, and kill you.» 

The strike marks the 10th operation targeting suspected drug traffickers since Trump returned to office. The president has made combating the nation’s drug crisis a central policy focus.

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The first strike took place on Sept. 2, and since then, 43 suspected drug traffickers have been killed and two have survived, officials said. The pace of the strikes has increased from one every few weeks in September to three so far this week. 

The operations have mostly targeted vessels linked to Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua network. The missions have ranged from attacks on smuggling boats to the destruction of a submersible, with footage of several operations released by Hegseth and Trump on social media.

TRUMP APPROVES MILITARY ACTION AGAINST LATIN AMERICAN CARTELS CLASSIFIED AS TERRORIST ORGANIZATIONS

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Hegseth briefs reporters.

War Secretary Pete Hegseth announced the latest strike Friday morning.  (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images )

When reporters asked Trump on Thursday whether he would request Congress issue a declaration of war against the cartels, he said that wasn’t the plan.

«I think we’re just going to kill people that are bringing drugs into our country, OK? We’re going to kill them, you know? They’re going to be like, dead,» Trump said during a roundtable at the White House with homeland security officials.

Trump this month declared drug cartels to be unlawful combatants and said the U.S. was in an «armed conflict» with them.

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Members of Congress from both sides of the aisle are questioning Trump’s decision to launch the operations without first consulting lawmakers. Several Democrats are warning that the strikes could breach international law.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., has also raised concerns about killing people without due process and the possibility of killing innocent people.

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Infrared view of debris and smoke after U.S. nighttime strike on suspected drug vessel.

An infrared image released by the Department of War shows debris and smoke following a nighttime strike on a suspected Tren de Aragua vessel in international waters of the Caribbean Sea. Officials said six alleged narco-terrorists were killed in the operation. (Department of War)

In a recent interview, Paul cited Coast Guard statistics that show a significant percentage of boats boarded for suspicion of drug trafficking are innocent.

The senator has also argued that if the administration plans to engage in a war with Venezuela, as it has targeted boats in recent weeks it claims are transporting drugs for the Venezuela-linked Tren de Aragua gang, it must seek a declaration of war from Congress.

Fox News’ Landon Mion and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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