Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

Jack Smith to face House lawmakers in deposition over his Trump prosecutions

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Former special counsel Jack Smith is set to appear Wednesday on Capitol Hill, where House lawmakers plan to question Smith directly for the first time about his investigations and prosecutions of President Donald Trump.

Advertisement

Smith will meet with House Judiciary Committee members behind closed doors for a deposition, during which both parties will interview him in one-hour increments.

His appearance comes amid the committee’s ongoing probe into his special counsel work and as Republicans have broadly accused Smith of overzealously pursuing Trump over his efforts to challenge the 2020 election results and his alleged retention of classified documents.

Republicans have specifically criticized Smith for seeking gag orders against Trump during his presidential campaign, attempting to fast-track court proceedings and subpoenaing records and phone data of hundreds of Trump-aligned people and entities, including members of Congress.

Advertisement

JACK SMITH SUBPOENAED FOR DEPOSITION WITH HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE

Special counsel Jack Smith speaks to members of the media at the Department of Justice building in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 1, 2023. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

Smith, for his part, plans to address what he views as mischaracterizations about his work, including the subpoenas, sources familiar with the matter told Fox News Digital. Smith will decline to answer questions he believes are covered by grand jury secrecy rules or Judge Aileen Cannon’s seal on certain material related to the classified documents case, the sources said.

Advertisement

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, is aiming to eventually release a full transcript of the deposition, another source familiar told Fox News Digital, but that could take time because rules surrounding depositions require Republicans and Democrats to agree to release it or the committee to vote on the release. Smith’s team must also have a chance to review it.

Smith previously told Congress he was willing to appear for a public hearing; however, Jordan subpoenaed him for the private testimony anyway. The chairman told Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo he preferred that format because lawmakers and House lawyers would have more time to question Smith.

DEMOCRATS RAMP UP CALLS TO RELEASE JACK SMITH’S SPECIAL COUNSEL REPORT ON TRUMP CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS CASE

Advertisement
Jim Jordan, chairman of House Judiciary Committee

Rep. Jim Jordan looks on during a hearing with the House Judiciary Committee in the Rayburn House Office Building on Sept. 3, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Trump has echoed Smith’s preference for a public hearing, telling reporters the former special counsel is a «sick man» and that he would «rather see him testify publicly because there’s no way he can answer the questions.» Jordan said he was open to Smith testifying publicly at a later date.

For several years, Jordan has criticized Smith’s work as a «weaponization» of prosecutorial authority. When he meets with Smith, among the topics Jordan plans to raise are Smith’s subpoenas of the Republican senators and House members who were in contact with Trump around the time of the Jan. 6, 2021, riot. Those subpoenas were issued as part of Arctic Frost, the FBI probe that led Smith to charge Trump over the 2020 election.

«We want to bring in Jack Smith, ask him all kinds of questions, not the least of which is this whole idea that he was going after what appears to be almost half the stinkin’ Republicans in Congress, getting their phone logs, and a bunch of other Americans,» Jordan said.

Advertisement
trump

President Donald Trump at the White House before boarding Marine One in Washington, D.C., Feb. 28, 2025. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The targeted lawmakers have blasted the subpoenas as scandalous and a breach of the Constitution’s separation of powers, while Smith has defended them as narrowly tailored and «entirely proper.»

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Smith faced significant obstacles while pursuing the two cases against Trump and ultimately dismissed the charges after Trump won the 2024 election, citing a DOJ policy that discourages prosecuting sitting presidents. Trump has denied any wrongdoing and has repeatedly labeled Smith «deranged» and a «thug» and called for his imprisonment.

Advertisement

The deposition is set to begin at 10 a.m.

congress,jim jordan,donald trump,justice department

INTERNACIONAL

La Unión Europea sancionó a 16 funcionarios y tres entidades iraníes más por la represión de las protestas de enero

Published

on


Miembros del Cuerpo de la Guardia Revolucionaria Islámica (IRGC) asisten a un ejercicio militar de las fuerzas terrestres del IRGC en la zona de Aras, provincia de Azerbaiyán Oriental, Irán, 19 de octubre de 2022
IRGC/WANA (Agencia de Noticias de Asia Occidental)/Handout via REUTERS

La Unión Europea amplió este lunes su lista de sancionados por la represión en Irán con 16 nuevos funcionarios y tres entidades, entre ellos comandantes de la Guardia Revolucionaria Islámica, miembros del poder judicial y el responsable del sistema penitenciario del país. El Consejo de la UE aprobó las medidas en Bruselas en respuesta a la participación directa de estos actores en la supresión violenta de las protestas de enero de 2026, que se saldaron con miles de muertos según diversas estimaciones internacionales.

Las nuevas designaciones elevan a 263 el número de personas y a 53 el de entidades sometidas a medidas restrictivas en el marco del régimen de sanciones que la UE mantiene sobre Irán por violaciones de derechos humanos, vigente desde 2011 y prorrogado hasta el 13 de abril de 2026.

Advertisement

Entre los recién incluidos figura el viceministro del Interior para Asuntos de Seguridad y Orden Público, así como varios comandantes de ramas locales del Cuerpo de la Guardia Revolucionaria Islámica (IRGC, por sus siglas en inglés). El Consejo también sancionó al Cuerpo Mohammad Rasulullah, encargado de coordinar las fuerzas del IRGC y de la milicia Basij en Teherán, y al Cuerpo de la Guardia Revolucionaria Imam Reza, rama provincial del IRGC en Jorasán Razaví, donde la represión fue, según el comunicado, “especialmente brutal”.

Las protestas comenzaron el 28 de diciembre de 2025, desencadenadas por el colapso del rial iraní y décadas de malestar político acumulado. Lo que empezó como una movilización de comerciantes en Teherán se extendió a más de un centenar de ciudades, convirtiéndose en el mayor levantamiento popular desde la revolución islámica de 1979. El régimen respondió con una violencia sin precedentes: las fuerzas de seguridad dispararon munición real contra los manifestantes, con las masacres más mortales los días 8 y 9 de enero, según documentó Amnistía Internacional.

Las cifras de víctimas permanecen en disputa. Las autoridades iraníes reconocieron oficialmente 3.117 muertos. La Relatora Especial de la ONU sobre Irán estimó que el número real podría superar los 5.000 fallecidos. La revista Time, citando documentos del Ministerio de Salud iraní, elevó esa cifra a hasta 30.000 personas solo en los días 8 y 9 de enero, dato que no pudo verificarse de forma independiente dado el bloqueo de internet impuesto por las autoridades desde ese mismo día.

Advertisement
FOTO DE ARCHIVO. El jefe
FOTO DE ARCHIVO. El jefe del Estado Mayor de las Fuerzas Armadas iraníes, Abdolrahim Musavi, habla durante una ceremonia de duelo por el fallecido comandante en jefe del Cuerpo de la Guardia Revolucionaria Islámica (IRGC), el general de división Hosein Salami, que murió en ataques israelíes, en Teherán, Irán. 4 de julio de 2025
Majid Asgaripour/WANA (Agencia de Noticias de Asia Occidental) vía REUTERS

La nueva lista incluye también a jueces y fiscales que participaron en procesos contra manifestantes, activistas, periodistas y opositores, algunos responsables de obtener confesiones bajo coacción y dictar condenas severas. Figura asimismo el director de la Organización de Prisiones, bajo cuya gestión se documentaron torturas, detenciones arbitrarias, aplicación de la pena de muerte a menores y violencia sexual contra reclusas.

En el ámbito tecnológico, el Consejo sancionó a Naji Research and Development Company (NRDC), empresa que desarrolló la aplicación Nazer, utilizada por las fuerzas del orden como herramienta de vigilancia ciudadana, y al jefe de la Policía Cibernética de Teherán, responsable de la censura en internet.

Esta ronda se produce en el marco de una escalada sostenida. El 19 de febrero, el Consejo formalizó la inclusión del IRGC en la lista de organizaciones terroristas de la UE. El 11 de marzo, una ronda previa designó a otras 19 personas y entidades, entre ellas el ministro del Interior Eskandar Momeni y el fiscal general Mohammad Movahedi Azad. Teherán calificó esas medidas de “ilegales” e “inmorales” y acusó a la UE de complicidad con lo que describió como una agresión exterior contra el país.

Con Irán sometido simultáneamente a una ofensiva militar exterior y a una crisis de legitimidad interna, la acumulación de designaciones europeas traza un mapa de responsabilidades que, tarde o temprano, alguien tendrá que responder.

Advertisement



Defense,Middle East

Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Cuba’s entire electrical grid collapses, leaving whole island without power

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Cuba plunged into an unprecedented blackout after its entire electrical grid suddenly suffered a total collapse on Monday, briefly leaving roughly 10 million residents in total darkness. 

Advertisement

«At 1:54 p.m. local time, there was a disconnection of the national electrical grid resulting in a complete power outage across Cuba which includes the Havana metropolitan area,» the U.S. Embassy in Cuba said. 

The nationwide outage comes just two days after a large crowd of protesters, fed up with the island’s energy crisis, were caught on camera attacking a local Communist Party headquarters in Cuba, ransacking the building and attempting to set it on fire.

Efforts to restore electricity are currently underway across the island, with reports indicating that power is slowly returning to some areas.

Advertisement

RUSSIAN ‘DARK FLEET’ TANKER BELIEVED TO BE DELIVERING OIL TO CUBA, DETECTED OFF US COAST AMID TRUMP BAN

A woman with her son signals a car on a dark street during a blackout in Bauta municipality, Artemisa province, Cuba, on March 18, 2024.  (Yamil Lage/AFP via Getty Images)

«The causes are being investigated and protocols for restoration are beginning to be activated,» the Ministry of Energy and Mines of Cuba said Monday afternoon, referring to the island’s disrupted National Electrical System of Cuba. 

Advertisement

Cuba’s electrical grid has grown increasingly unstable over the years due to aging infrastructure, fuel shortages, and economic restrictions that have limited the country’s access to energy resources – including Washington’s long‑standing oil embargo and recent U.S. actions that disrupted Venezuelan fuel shipments, a key source of the nation’s energy.

Power outages have become a frequent occurrence across the country, disrupting water supply, refrigeration and communications.

«Officials in the US gov must be feeling very happy by the harm caused to every Cuban family,» Cuban Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs Carlos F. de Cossio said in response to Monday’s blackout. 

Advertisement

MILLIONS LOSE POWER ACROSS CUBA AS TRUMP SANCTIONS CONTINUE TO FUEL ONGOING ENERGY CRISIS

woman and man sitting at dining table in the dark

Neya Perez, 86, paints the nails of her neighbor Reyna Maria Rodriguez, 77, during a mass blackout across most of the country, in Havana, March 4, 2026. (Norlys Perez/Reuters)

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said Friday that no fuel has entered the country for the past three months. Since then, electricity generation has relied heavily on a «considerable contribution from renewable energy sources.»

The total collapse of the power grid came just as officials announced updates to their solar panel project in Villa Clara, describing it as a «national security necessity» amid ongoing restrictions on fossil fuel imports under the Trump administration.

Advertisement

«Amid a context of severe energy constraints and a recurring economic lockdown, #Cuba takes another firm step towards electric sovereignty,» the Villa Clara Electric Company said Monday morning. 

«This connection comes at a critical time: Washington maintains severe restrictions on our country’s access to fossil fuels, funding and technology. Betting on renewables isn’t just environmental — it’s a national security necessity.»

As the island continues to face rolling power outages, residents have been urged to brace for significant disruption and unplug all nonessential equipment, «leaving only essential devices powered on until service stability is restored,» the Villa Clara Electric Company said.

Advertisement
Family has dinner during power blackout

A family has dinner during a blackout in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian in Havana on Sept. 28, 2022. (Alexandre Meneghini/Reuters)

Last Saturday, in a rare display of public dissent driven by frustration over widespread blackouts, anti-government protesters in Cuba reportedly targeted a Communist Party office by hurling rocks, shouting «liberty» and igniting large fires at the scene.  

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

The rally, caught on video, began peacefully in the city of Morón late Friday but escalated into violence within hours, Reuters reported, citing local sources.

Advertisement

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment.

Reuters contributed to this report.

Advertisement



cuba,energy,sanctions

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Jasmine Crockett defends her security guard who was killed in police standoff, wanted for impersonating cop

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The man who worked security for Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, but was killed in a standoff with SWAT last week was accused of impersonating a police officer and other offenses, although the congresswoman is defending him, saying his criminal history does not include any violent offenses.

Advertisement

The suspect, who was identified as Diamon-Mazairre Robinson, 39, was shot and killed by Dallas Police SWAT officers on Wednesday. He had barricaded himself inside a vehicle in the garage of a children’s hospital after Dallas Police officers tracked him while investigating an active warrant.

Police deployed tear gas to force him out before the suspect exited the vehicle and pointed a gun at officers, leading officers to shoot him. The suspect did not fire his gun, and no officers were injured.

Dash camera footage of the incident at Children’s Medical Center Dallas was released on Monday.

Advertisement

JASMINE CROCKETT’S ALLEGED SECURITY GUARD KILLED IN STANDOFF WITH DALLAS SWAT TEAM: REPORTS

Dallas police responded to a SWAT standoff at Children’s Medical Center Dallas where officers shot and killed a man who worked as a security guard for Rep. Jasmine Crockett. (FOX ; Ron Jenkins/Getty Images)

He was wanted for impersonating a law enforcement officer and had claimed to be one while recruiting for his business that placed off-duty officers in security jobs.

Advertisement

Robinson was driving a replica undercover car with stolen U.S. government plates, often wore fake police uniforms pretending he was a federal agent and created a fraudulent business where he used fake identifying information to hire legitimate police officers for off-duty jobs. Dallas Police also said 11 firearms were recovered during their investigation, including the handgun he was holding during the shooting, which was reported stolen. 

He was also not using his real name, going by the alias «Mike King.»

«The agencies that he reported to work for do not exist. So dignitaries, basically special dignitary police, that agency does not exist within the federal government. So that’s who he portrayed to be. There was no actual federal agency that he worked for that existed. He was very good at hiding his true identity … He had been living like this for many years,» Dallas Deputy Police Chief William Griffith said on Monday.

Advertisement
Diamon-Mazairre Robinson raising a gun

Dashcam footage of the standoff between SWAT and Diamon-Mazairre Robinson. (Dallas Police Department)

Robinson has a lengthy criminal history, with arrests going back as far as 2010. He has been charged with offenses such as theft and violating probation.

Crockett came to the defense of her former security guard, releasing a statement on Monday saying her office was unable to find any violent offenses in his «limited criminal history.»

«We are saddened and shocked by some of the concerning revelations. Our team followed all protocols outlined by the House to contract additional security. We were approved to use this vendor who also provided security services for additional entities in the local community and worked closely with law enforcement agencies including Capitol Police,» she said in the statement.

Advertisement

The congresswoman said, «the fact that an individual was able to somehow circumvent the vetting processes for something as sensitive as security for members of Congress highlights the loopholes and shortcomings in many of our systems.»

Dallas police officers standing near vehicles during response to hospital parking garage standoff

Dallas police officers gather near vehicles outside a hospital parking garage after a SWAT standoff. (FOX 4)

JASMINE CROCKETT CAMPAIGN REPORTEDLY KICKED ATLANTIC WRITER OUT OF RALLY FOR BEING A ‘TOP-NOTCH HATER’

«This is incredibly alarming, especially for those members who receive high volumes of credible and sophisticated death threats,» she said. «This situation reiterates the need for Capitol Police to provide security for members of Congress, especially under this administration’s new normal of inciting attacks on those who dare to speak out. We are fortunate that this is someone who used those loopholes without malice. Furthermore, after an initial review of the limited criminal history of Diamon Mazairre Robinson in Dallas County, we’ve been unable to locate any violent offenses.»

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

The progressive lawmaker added that «there was never any reason to suspect that he wasn’t who he held himself out to be,» saying he never endangered her team, worked diligently, coordinated with local law enforcement and maintained positive relationships throughout the community.»

«What we’re now learning about his past doesn’t fit the person we came to know as Mike King,» she wrote. «His death evokes a range of emotions. Our hearts grieve the loss of someone we knew and the lost good that could have come from his redemption.»

Advertisement

texas,us,crime world,police and law enforcement,politics

Continue Reading

Tendencias