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ODNI sends criminal referrals to DOJ for ex-IG, whistleblower tied to Trump impeachment

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EXCLUSIVE: The Office of the Director of National Intelligence sent criminal referrals to the Justice Department for the whistleblower whose complaint helped trigger President Donald Trump’s 2019 impeachment and for the former intelligence community inspector general who notified Congress of the allegations, Fox News Digital has learned.

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«I want to refer information that may constitute possible criminal activity in violation of federal criminal law committed by one or more former employees of the intelligence community,» ODNI’s general counsel wrote in the referral to the Justice Department.

Fox News Digital on Wednesday reviewed the referrals ODNI sent to the Justice Department. 

«The possible criminal activity concerns the circumstances described in the following congressional briefings: Discussion with Intelligence Community Inspector General, House Permanent Select Comm. on Intel., 116th Cong. (2019); Briefing by the Intelligence Community Inspector General, House Permanent Select Comm. on Intel., 116th Cong. (2019),» it continued.  

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GABBARD CLAIMS ‘COORDINATED EFFORT’ BY INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY TO ADVANCE NARRATIVE TO IMPEACH TRUMP 

Michael Atkinson, then-inspector general of the intelligence community, leaves the Capitol after closed doors interview about the whistleblower complaint that exposed a July phone call the president had with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in which Trump pressed for an investigation of Democratic political rival Joe Biden and his family, at the Capitol in Washington, Friday, Oct. 4, 2019.  (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

The referrals come after DNI Tulsi Gabbard released documents earlier this week exposing what was described as a «coordinated effort» by elements within the intelligence community—including then-Inspector General Michael Atkinson, to «manufacture a conspiracy» that was used as the basis to impeach Trump in 2019.

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An intelligence official told Fox News Digital that the language in the referral is broad, but that it’s specifically directed at Atkinson and the whistleblower who reported concerns about President Trump’s July 2019 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. 

FLASHBACK: NUNES THREATENS TO REFER WATCHDOG’S HANDLING OF WHISTLEBLOWER COMPLAINT TO DOJ

ODNI directed Fox News Digital to a recent X post from Gabbard when asked for comment on the referrals. 

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«Newly-declassified records expose how deep state actors within the Intelligence Community concocted a false narrative that Congress used to usurp the will of the American people and impeach duly-elected President @realDonaldTrump in 2019,» Gabbard posted to X on Monday. 

President Trump and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

President Donald Trump and Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy shake hands at the start of a joint news conference following a meeting at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) (AP)

Fox News Digital reached out to the Department of Justice on Wednesday afternoon regarding the referrals. 

The documents Gabbard released earlier this week include transcripts from Atkinson’s closed-door testimony before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, which were withheld from the House Judiciary Committee during the first impeachment trial. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rick Crawford, R-Ark., led a vote to release the transcripts in March.

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ODNI said the documents confirmed that Atkinson «failed to conduct basic due diligence and willfully exceeded his statutory jurisdiction to mischaracterize the president’s phone call with Zelensky as an ‘urgent concern’ to Congress.»

Atkinson, during his investigation, found that the whistleblower showed indications of «political bias» and was «in favor of a rival political candidate,» while still deeming the complaint a matter of «urgent concern.»

Atkinson received a complaint in August 2019 from the whistleblower, who was raising concerns about Trump’s July 2019 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, pressing him to launch investigations into the Biden family’s actions and business dealings in Ukraine. The president specifically suggested Zelensky look into Hunter Biden’s ventures with Ukrainian natural gas firm Burisma Holdings and former President Joe Biden’s successful effort to have former Ukrainian prosecutor General Viktor Shokin ousted.

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Hunter Biden was quietly under federal investigation, beginning in 2018, at the time of the call, a probe prompted by suspicious foreign transactions.

Hunter Biden gets off plane with president

President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter Biden, step off Air Force One, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2023, at Hancock Field Air National Guard Base in Syracuse, N.Y. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Trump’s request was regarded by Democrats as a quid pro quo because millions of dollars in U.S. military aid to Ukraine had been frozen. Democrats also said Trump was meddling in the 2020 presidential election by asking a foreign leader to look into a Democrat political opponent.

Biden has acknowledged that when he was vice president, he successfully pressured Ukraine to fire Shokin. At the time, Shokin was investigating Burisma Holdings and Hunter had a highly lucrative role on the board, receiving thousands of dollars per month. The then-vice president threatened to withhold $1 billion of critical U.S. aid if Shokin was not fired.

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«I said, ‘You’re not getting the billion.’ … I looked at them and said, ‘I’m leaving in six hours. If the prosecutor is not fired, you’re not getting the money,’» Biden recalled telling then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko. Biden recollected the conversation during an event for the Council on Foreign Relations in 2018.

FLASHBACK: HOUSE INTEL REPUBLICANS INVESTIGATING ICIG HANDLING OF WHISTLEBLOWER COMPLAINT

«Well, son of a b—-, he got fired,» Biden said during the event. «And they put in place someone who was solid at the time.»

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Biden allies maintain the then-vice president pushed for Shokin’s firing due to concerns the Ukrainian prosecutor went easy on corruption, and they say that his firing, at the time, was the policy position of the U.S. and international community.

Meanwhile, House Republicans, back in 2019 and 2020, sought to refer Atkinson and the whistleblower to the DOJ for investigation. 

Republicans, at the time, complained that the whistleblower made contact with the staff of then-Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., in advance — though Schiff downplayed the nature of that contact.

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The White House, under Trump’s first term, released a declassified version of the whistleblower complaint, which revealed that the whistleblower’s concerns stemmed from the secondhand accounts of «more than half a dozen U.S. officials.»

Trump smiles as he speaks

President Donald Trump speaks during a board meeting of the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center For The Performing Arts in the East Room of the White House, Monday, March 16, 2026, in Washington.  (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

The declassified whistleblower complaint, though, stated: «I was not a direct witness to most of the events described. However, I found my colleagues’ accounts of these events to be credible, because, in almost all cases, multiple officials recounted fact patterns that were consistent with one another.»

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Trump was impeached in the House of Representatives in December 2019. He was acquitted by the Senate in February 2020. 

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

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Top highlights from Trump’s late night July 4 address: ‘No dream in history is bigger’

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President Donald Trump delivered a 37-minute speech for America’s 250th birthday after a weather delay in the dark of night that was lit up by a Guinness world-record-setting fireworks display stretching from July 4 into July 5 at Washington, D.C.’s National Mall.

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While thousands outlasted the rain and dodged nature’s thunderstorm light show, many Americans might have missed the president’s historic remarks.

Here is a recap of some of the highlights.

AMERICA’S NEXT 250 YEARS DEPEND ON PASSING FAITH AND FREEDOM TO OUR CHILDREN

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President Donald Trump estimated in his speech that a crowd of 350,000 was cut to 150,000 on the Washington, D.C., National Mall for the record-setting fireworks display over the Washington Monument as part of the Salute to America 250 celebration. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc)

‘No dream in history is bigger’ than the American experiment

«In this country, we could achieve the wildest and most impossible dreams, and no dream in history is bigger or more incredible than the one that started on July 4th, 1776,» Trump said. «The war for independence was launched by minutemen, farmers, blacksmiths, tradesmen who took up their muskets against the mightiest army on earth, the most powerful army and unbeatable army – until they met us.»

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«No one made them do it. They fought because they knew that a free people must have a free country. Over 250 years, the world has seen the great empires, vast kingdoms, mighty nations and terrible tyrants: They came and they went, but after 2 1/2 centuries, this American republic still stands tall and strong,» the president added.

TRUMP HAILS AMERICA AS ‘MOST EXCEPTIONAL NATION EVER TO EXIST’ IN MOUNT RUSHMORE SPEECH

‘America is a nation of winners’

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«Americans won the West and built the modern world, because America is a nation of winners, and today our country is winning again, and we’re winning like never before,» Trump said just before the midway point of the speech. «America is back and we want to keep America great.»

«Together, we are also reasserting the truth that American strength and power is not something to be ashamed of. It is something that we are very, very proud of,» Trump continued. «This country has been the greatest force for peace and justice on earth in the last century. We defeated tyrants, demolished evil, and saved freedom again and again and again.»

‘Nothing Americans cannot do’

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«There is no challenge Americans can not overcome,» Trump said before his concluding remarks. «There is no place we cannot go. There is no goal we cannot reach. And there is nothing that Americans cannot do.»

national mall crowd waits through rain and a thunderstorm for Trump's speech

The crowd got 37 minutes of President Donald Trump’s historic America 250 speech and 38 minutes of the largest fireworks display in world history, breaking a Guinness Book of World Records mark as planned by Trump. (Pete Kiehart/Bloomberg)

Thanking those staying into the late hours

«If you think that was easy, it wasn’t,» Trump began in an unscripted salute to the patient and devoted crowd. «And I want to thank everybody because they did the right thing. They saw lightning. And I said, ‘there’s no way; if we have to speak in front of one person at 4 in the morning, I’m going to be here.’

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«There’s no way we can be deterred. And they estimated they had 375,000 people before everybody had to leave, and they now have 150,000 people. It’s the craziest thing anyone’s ever seen.

«And I want to just thank you. And I feel so badly about some people. They left it; they couldn’t get back. But, you’re very special people, and we have a very special country. Thank you very much.»

’56 patriots put everything at risk’ for ‘victory for the ages’

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«They declare that all men are created equal; that they are endowed with sacred unalienable rights by the hand of our creator, and that among these are life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,» Trump said, «and signing their names to the roster of freedom.»

«Those 56 patriots put everything at risk. Stepped onto the stage of destiny and seized a victory for the ages. And that’s what it was,» he said. «And this is an evening for the ages. I believe this is something very special. This is bigger than if we didn’t have the lightning blaring. We had lightning blaring. But this is bigger, little more inconvenient, but it’s bigger, I think, in its own way it’s more beautiful. From the beginning, we were a nation that live by the motto victory or death and live free or die.»

‘We will always be the best’

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«God bless the immortal patriots of 1776, and long live the cause of independence,» Trump said. «May it reign forever and ever and ever. We will always be on top. We will never let our country fall. We will always be the best.»

«Our founders not only won our liberty, they secured it with the most righteous political document ever conceived: It’s called the Constitution of the United States,» Trump said. «Very special, and it’s because of their genius that we remain the finest people on the planet.»

Honoring 11 Gold Star families

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«We are honored to be joined by 11 Gold Star family members,» Trump said. «The Gold Star family – that is one of the great tributes. It’s one of the great honors, a tough honor. There’s nothing tougher than that. But these are amazing people.»

Next stop, the moon, then a mission to Mars

«We’re going to be going to Mars very soon, and I think that’s something that we do have in my mind,» Trump said, hearkening to the historic John F. Kennedy going to the moon speech excerpt.

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«And we’re going to do the moon and we’re going to go from there. We’re going to go to Mars, and we’re going to continue to be way ahead.»

Defeating communism: We ‘cast the hammer and sickle into oblivion’

«All these talks from the communists, they haven’t got a chance – not even a chance,» Trump said; a theme he reiterated multiple times in the speech. «We don’t want communists in our country. Never worked and it never will work.»

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Communism will always be «a loser,» Trump added later.

«Our warriors did not fight communism on battlefields across the world only to have that menace rears its ugly head right back here in America. We’re not going to let it happen. We like to stop a threat like that immediately and before it begins,» Trump said. «It’s like a cancer. You got to cut it out. You got to cut it out fast.»

Trump added a warning to potential future communist opposition around the globe.

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«The Stars and Stripes cast the hammer and sickle into oblivion before,» Trump said, «and we will do it again if necessary.»

«I don’t think it’s going to be necessary. I think people have learned. They’ve learned what to do and how to handle it, and we’ll get a handle it very well.»

‘Our destiny is written by God’

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«We have thrived and flourished because our founders were great, our cause was just, our people are brave, our culture is exceptional, and our destiny is written by God,» Trump said near the end of the speech he apparently cut short after vowing earlier this week to deliver an hours-long address to the world.

«And as we can see here tonight, after 250 years, the spirit of 1776 still lives within us all. It still roars in the hearts of our nation’s capital. It still burns in the heart of every patriot, thunders through every city and town, and is still lights the entire world with the glow of American liberty. And there is nothing like that.»

250 and ‘just getting started’: ‘Best is yet to come’; ‘dawn of the golden age’

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Fireworks over the national mall for America's 250

Fireworks over the National Mall during the ‘Freedom 250: Salute to America’ Independence Day celebration in Washington, D.C., might have extended to July 5, 2026, but President Donald Trump still made sure they went off for the thousands that waited out the thunderstorm with him Saturday night. (Mehmet Eser/Anadolu)

«At 250 years old, we may be the oldest constitutional republic on earth, but our country is just getting started because the best is yet to come: This is only the dawn of the golden age of America,» Trump said in his conclusion, leading directly into the National Mall fireworks display.

«And on this 250th 4th of July, we declare, just as they did two and a half centuries ago, that for our country and for our children and for the cause of liberty, we are going to take our country to new levels, to levels not reached,» Trump continued. «We’re going to make it bigger, better, stronger, and we’re going to love it even more.»

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«And I just want to thank you,» he added, finishing with words off the script. «The inconvenience of lightning can do that, but lightning will never stop you. And I want to thank everybody and we love you all. And it’s an honor to be your president. Thank you. God bless you all.»

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La otra cara de la tragedia en Venezuela: «los cobreros» revuelven los escombros en busca de algo de valor

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A un par de kilómetros del último edificio en ruinas de Caraballeda, en La Guaira, una imagen resume otro costado de la tragedia que provocaron los dos terremotos consecutivos: la crisis económica en Venezuela. En descampados frente al mar, camiones volcadores sacan los escombros de la zona del desastre y decenas de personas revuelven los cascotes en búsqueda de materiales con valor para poder intercambiarlos por un puñado de dólares.

En el camino asfaltado que comunica a Tanaguarena con Naiguatá, el calor es extremo. En ese sector de la costa de La Guaira, el mar no tiene playa y solo devuelve más humedad, a un sol que deshidrata con más de 35 grados.

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A solo unos minutos de donde trabajan los rescatistas, la imagen se asemeja a la del desastre. Hay pequeños montículos de escombros, hierros retorcidos y polvo. En las banquinas, esperan motos y bicicletas estacionadas. Unas treinta personas caminan entre los cascotes con palas y palos. Remueven los restos de edificios y torres. Buscan cobre y otros elementos de valor que puedan intercambiar por dólares, en la economía bimonetaria de Venezuela.

Empezaron a aparecer una semana después de los dos terremotos que azotaron a Venezuela, de 7.1 y 7.5 en la escala Richter y que hasta el momento contabilizan 2.954 muertos confirmados por el régimen; 16.592 heridos y más de 50 mil desaparecidos.

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“Hace como tres días que vengo. He conseguido algo como para cambiar por un saladito. Busco cobre, aluminio, algo para reciclaje. Se junta y uno puede sacar cuatro dólares, cinco dólares”, cuenta José Díaz (54) a Clarín.

Vestido con ropas largas del Fútbol Club Barcelona, intenta que el sol le pegue lo menos posible. Lleva gorra y un cubre cuello. Asegura que revuelve los restos de los edificios porque no tiene empleo. No tiene guantes y queda expuesto al contagio de enfermedades producto de lo que puedan llevar estas ruinas.

“Trabajo vendiendo mango cuando hay turismo. Mientras no haya turismo, no tenemos nada”, remarca el hombre padre de tres hijos, quien reconoce que cada día se acercan más personas a revolver los cascotes.

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“Caímos en la necesidad de esto. Lo que pasó aquí no fue fácil”, señala el hombre que escarba en el polvo junto a su hermano.

Venezolanos buscan cobre entre los escombros del terremoto. Foto: Fernando de la Orden / Enviado Especial

Un joven llamado Anderson vive en Naiguatá, la ciudad que sigue a Caraballeda, y que casi no padeció los terremotos. Es uno de los que se acerca a buscar cobre. “Ahora nos pagan cinco dólares el kilo de cobre en el barrio, aunque en otro lado vale 10. Siempre están trayendo cascotes. Esto no es ni la mitad de lo que se destruyó, así que vamos a tener mucho trabajo para revisar”, le dice a este diario.

Los escombros se esparcen a lo largo de un par de cuadras y hasta donde llega el pequeño acantilado. Los camiones se acercan a cada rato, dan la vuelta y vuelcan la carga que recogieron en Caraballeda.

A los pocos minutos de estar en la zona, aparece un camión volcador amarillo. Gira sobre la ruta, se pone de culata y avanza lento hacia atrás. Once personas se acercan rápido. Cuando abre su portón e inclina la batea, todos se amuchan. Están por caer escombros nuevos, pero también restos de aires acondicionados, de estufas, de aparatos electrónicos en los que puede haber cobre y otros materiales.

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Antes de que todos los cascotes toquen el suelo empiezan a tironear de los cables que pudieron ver. La escena es dramática. Bajo un sol abrasador, los “cobreros” tienen más material para escarbar y separar hasta juntar un kilo de cobre. Saben que después de la revisión pueden sumar, cinco, diez, quince dólares en el mejor de los casos. A unos kilómetros de ahí, una arepa en un puesto callejero puede costar dos dólares. También tiene su precio en bolívares, pero casi todos hablan de precios con la divisa norteamericana por delante.

Así revuelven las ruinas del terremoto para buscar cobre entre los escombros. Foto: Fernando de la Orden / Enviado Especial

Así como estos venezolanos buscan entre los escombros ya retirados de la zona de la catástrofe, también se han registrado robos entre las ruinas de las torres, donde hay vecinos que buscan a sus familiares.

Clarín fue testigo de cómo unos hombres sacaban una camioneta doble tracción, que había quedado en un subsuelo. Al llevarla a la superficie, los dueños mostraron cómo le habían robado la pantalla interior, y las luces externas.

“Han bajado malandros de Caracas para aprovechar la oportunidad y robar. Entraban a edificios donde nadie estaba buscando víctimas y saqueaban”, relata el caraqueño Miguel León, con familia en La Guaira.

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Revuelven los escombros en busca de materiales de valor en La Guaira. Foto: Fernando de la Orden / Enviado Especial

Es una de las postales de la crisis económica que ahora exhibe el desastre de los terremotos. La mayoría de los venezolanos cobran un salario muy bajo, unos 240 dólares, entre el básico y los bonos como el cestaticket. Por esta razón, muchos persiguen un rebusque para sumar algo más. Y ahora, sobre una falta de empleo que ya se hacía sentir, impactará con fuerza esta tragedia humanitaria cuyas consecuencias son inciertas.

Venezuela. Enviado especial.

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Australian healing with ‘beautiful messages’ after losing arm to shark attack

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Leah Stewart, an Australian mother and teacher who lost an arm after a shark attack at Sydney’s Coogee Beach, has been reading messages from supporters around the world during sleepless nights as she continues her long recovery, her family said.

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«We’ve been sharing some of the beautiful messages we’ve received with Leah and she’s loved them, finding inspiration from the care and love you’ve all shared,» her brother, Joshua Stewart, wrote in a GoFundMe update on Sunday.

«Leah has had some challenging days but has found real strength from your kindness and support,» he added.

Leah Stewart has struggled with sleep in her recovery and has leaned on the wave of support from family, friends and strangers.

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AUTHORITIES IDENTIFY WOMAN KILLED IN ALLIGATOR ATTACK WHILE SWIMMING WITH FRIENDS IN CENTRAL FLORIDA

«Since the incident Leah has had difficulty sleeping, and on those nights she’s been reading back through your messages, not only from her family and community in Australia and her whānau in New Zealand, but also from people all across the world,» he wrote, using the Maori word for family. «They’ve given her real comfort and strength.»

Stewart, mother to a 1-year-old daughter and passionate teacher, was attacked June 13 while on a morning swim close to shore and within the flags at Coogee Beach, according to her family. She suffered life-threatening injuries, including multiple bites across her arms and legs, lacerations, fractures and extreme blood loss.

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She was placed on life support, put under a medically induced coma and underwent multiple surgeries in the days after the attack. Her treatment required the amputation of one arm, and the family said more surgeries were scheduled as doctors worked to save her life and stabilize her condition.

Stewart, who woke up from her 10-day coma after doctors reduced her sedation, told her mother and partner, Fernando, «I love you.» Her brother said at the time that her first thoughts were with her young daughter, August.

SHARK ATTACK SURVIVOR WAKES FROM 10-DAY COMA AND SHARES FIRST WORDS WITH FAMILY AT HER HOSPITAL BEDSIDE

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«Leah has a long road ahead,» Joshua Stewart wrote after she briefly woke, calling the moment a hopeful first step in her recovery.

Joshua Stewart said the family wanted to apologize for delays in responding to supporters, explaining they have had issues with the GoFundMe messaging system.

«Leah is beyond overwhelmed at the amazing support she has received and that her story has resonated with so many people,» he wrote. «Thank you!»

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The fundraiser was launched to help Stewart, her partner and their young daughter through what her family described as a heartbreaking situation. The money will support her recovery, prosthetics, rehabilitation, ongoing care and the major adjustments she will need as she works toward returning to life as a mother.

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Her family also thanked the lifesavers, first responders, helicopter crew and medical team at St. Vincent’s Hospital who helped care for Stewart after the attack.

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«As a family we are shocked and devastated that this could happen to our beloved partner, daughter and mother who is so full of life and energy,» Joshua Stewart wrote.



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