Matzav

Trump Sues IRS and Treasury Department for $10 Billion Over Tax Return Leak

President Donald Trump, along with two of his sons and the Trump Organization, filed a lawsuit Thursday against the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department, alleging the agencies failed to prevent the unlawful release of his tax information during his first term in office. The case stems from a breach for which a former IRS contractor admitted guilt in 2023.

The complaint, brought by Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump, and the Trump Organization, asserts that the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Treasury Department failed in their “duty to safeguard and protect Plaintiffs’ confidential tax returns and related tax return information from such unauthorized inspection and public disclosure.”

According to the lawsuit, those failures led to “reputational and financial harm, public embarrassment, unfairly tarnished their business reputations, portrayed them in a false light, and negatively affected President Trump, and the other Plaintiffs’ public standing.”

The plaintiffs are seeking $10 billion in damages. The case was filed in federal court in Florida.

The suit follows criminal proceedings involving Charles Littlejohn, an IRS contractor who pleaded guilty in 2023 to unlawfully obtaining and leaking confidential tax records tied to Trump and thousands of other high-net-worth individuals to two media outlets in 2019 and 2020.

Littlejohn was sentenced to five years in prison. During his sentencing hearing in 2024, a federal judge described the disclosures as “an attack on our constitutional democracy.”

{Matzav.com}

American Airlines to Resume US Flights to Venezuela After Trump Moves to Open Airspace

American Airlines announced Thursday that it intends to restore daily service to Venezuela, pending approval from the U.S. government and the completion of security reviews, only weeks after the U.S. military carried out an operation that resulted in the seizure of the country’s leader.

Earlier in the day, President Donald Trump said he had urged the Department of Transportation to remove existing restrictions that prevent U.S. airlines from flying to Venezuela, following a conversation with the country’s acting president, Delcy Rodriguez.

“American citizens will be very shortly able to go to Venezuela, and they’ll be safe there,” Trump said.

The airline halted its Venezuela routes in 2019 after U.S. authorities imposed a ban on flights. Earlier this month, the United States launched a military action in Venezuela and detained the country’s president, Nicolas Maduro.

American Airlines, which first began flying to Venezuela in 1987, said the planned service would support business travel, tourism, and humanitarian efforts. Prior to the suspension, the carrier was the largest U.S. airline operating in the country.

Before flights can resume, the Federal Aviation Administration must complete a series of safety evaluations, a process that is expected to take several months.

On Jan. 16, the FAA advised airlines to take extra precautions when operating over Mexico, Central America, and parts of South America, citing concerns over possible military activity and GPS signal disruptions.

The agency said it had issued Notices to Airmen for airspace over Mexico and Central America, as well as Ecuador, Colombia, and sections of the eastern Pacific Ocean.

Relations between the United States and leaders in the region have grown increasingly tense following a significant U.S. military buildup in the southern Caribbean ordered by the Trump administration.

Earlier this month, Trump said drug cartels had effectively taken control of Mexico and suggested that U.S. forces could strike targets on land as part of efforts to combat them, one of several statements signaling a willingness to use military force against the cartels.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has repeatedly cautioned that any unilateral U.S. military action on Mexican soil would amount to a serious breach of national sovereignty. At the same time, she has agreed to enhanced bilateral security cooperation with Washington in an effort to keep Mexico out of Trump’s direct focus.

Concerns over regional air safety intensified last month when a JetBlue flight headed to New York was forced to take evasive action to avoid a near-collision with a U.S. Air Force tanker aircraft near Venezuela that was not transmitting a transponder signal.

{Matzav.com}

Mamdani Ordered Homeless Camps To Stay Before Deep-Freeze Deaths

New York City officials under Mayor Zohran Mamdani directed police officers and sanitation crews to stop dismantling homeless encampments just weeks before a brutal Arctic cold snap, after which 10 people were found dead outdoors, according to a report by The New York Post.

The directive was issued shortly after the democratic socialist mayor took office and effectively shifted responsibility for the encampments to the Department of Homeless Services, an agency that sources say was unprepared for the role and received little instruction from City Hall.

The policy change followed Mamdani’s December pledge to end homeless sweeps and took effect ahead of a severe winter storm and plunging temperatures that battered New York City over the past week.

During the previous administration, Mayor Eric Adams expanded the use of encampment clearings as the problem intensified during the COVID-era shutdowns, though the practice had been used by multiple mayors before him, including Mamdani ally Bill de Blasio.

According to insiders, NYPD officers have been instructed to limit their role to responding to calls and logging the locations of encampments, without disturbing anything that could be considered personal property.

Under the new rules, police may only intervene directly if someone inside a tent experiences a medical emergency.

Even in situations involving potential safety hazards, officers have been told they must elevate concerns to supervisors rather than act on their own, sources said.

Sanitation Department workers were also ordered not to interfere with encampments.

Instead, city employees were told to alert Department of Homeless Services staff.

However, City Hall has not yet provided DHS with clear guidance on how to address the makeshift shelters.

“The lack of guidance from City Hall is costing people their lives,” said Council member Joann Ariola (R-Ozone Park), whose office said it was unable to get an abandoned encampment removed.

“We have below-zero temperatures at night, but the administration is taking a smiley, milquetoast approach to Code Blue enforcement,” Ariola said. “It may sound nice to his idealist progressive supporters when he says he won’t enforce homeless sweeps, but the reality is that these sweeps get people indoors and out of the elements. Some people need that kind of tough love for their own good.”

Steven Fulop, the CEO of the Partnership for NYC, which represents more than 800,000 city workers in the business sector, also criticized the mayor’s approach.

“We are hearing broad and growing disagreement with the mayor’s position,” he said. “There is nothing humane about allowing people to live indefinitely in street encampments.

“It fails the homeless individuals who need real services and stability, and it fails the surrounding communities who are left without safe, workable public spaces. We are hopeful the mayor revisits his position here.”

A spokesperson for Mamdani did not respond directly to questions about the absence of guidance for DHS, instead offering a general statement on the situation.

“Our focus has been and continues to be bringing homeless individuals inside and off the streets during these extreme and dangerous temperatures,” said press secretary Dora Pekec.

Mamdani faced criticism even before taking office after announcing plans in December to end encampment clearings, with experts and former officials labeling the proposal “naive.”

During his single term, the Adams administration carried out roughly 8,000 encampment “clean out” operations, with monthly totals peaking at around 500 in late 2023.

Adams had made the issue central to his administration as he sought to restore order to city streets following the disruptions caused by the coronavirus shutdown.

De Blasio, a progressive Democrat who advised Mamdani during the transition, oversaw more than 10,000 sweeps across his two terms, a record that drew backlash from allies on the left.

{Matzav.com}

Suspect In Car-Ramming At Chabad Headquarters Faces Multiple Hate-Crime Charges

Dan Sohail, 36, is suspected of driving a car five times into the doors to a synagogue at Chabad-Lubavitch world headquarters in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y., on Wednesday evening, Joseph Kenny, chief of detectives at the New York City Police Department, said at a press conference.

The suspect, of Carteret, N.J., “had recently connected with the Lubavitch community,” and removed blockades from the same site the prior day, Kenney said.

“This incident is being investigated as a hate crime, and the NYPD’s hate crime task force took the lead on this case,” Kenny said. “We are collaborating with our state and federal partners.”

He added that Sohail has been charged with “attempted assault one and two as a hate crime, reckless endangerment two as a hate crime, criminal mischief two and three as a hate crime and aggravated harassment as a hate crime.”

The suspect claimed he lost control of the car because he was wearing clunky boots, the chief of detectives said. “It’s a hate crime based on his attack on the synagogue,” Kenny said, noting that the suspect knew it was a synagogue.

Ofir Akunis, Israeli consul general in New York, stated that “this is the new reality in New York for Jews.”

 

“We are seeing one antisemitic attack followed by the next on houses of worship, targeting Jews simply because they are Jewish,” he stated. “The attacks are only intensifying in New York, and the response requires more than a statement. We warned that changing the definition of antisemitism and lifting the ban on boycott initiatives against Israel could lead to an increase in attacks, and regrettably, that is what is happening.”

Zohran Mamdani, mayor of New York City, axed all of his predecessors’ recent executive orders, including those designed to protect Jews in the city, within hours of taking over control of City Hall. Mamdani, who has said he would have the Israeli prime minister arrested in New York, has also said that he is interested in divesting the city with the largest Jewish population outside of the Jewish state from Israel Bonds.

“This attack is part of a growing wave of antisemitic incidents driven by an organized, long-running campaign to dehumanize Jews and delegitimize the existence of the Jewish state,” Akunis stated. “Toxic and violent rhetoric is a central component of this propaganda. Antisemitism must be confronted decisively.”

‘A living, breathing thing’

Video footage that has emerged appears to show the suspect removing barricades and telling bystanders to move before he began ramming his vehicle into the entrance doors to Chabad’s global headquarters in Brooklyn.

The suspect was at the location weeks prior, reportedly claiming that he was Jewish, and young students were said to have offered him religious services.

The NYPD said that no one was injured in the attack and that the driver was arrested without incident. The department told JNS that it responded at about 8:45 p.m. to 770 Eastern Parkway, where officers saw a gray Honda sedan, which “collided into entrance doors at the bottom of a sloped driveway in front of 770 Eastern Parkway.”

Wednesday, the 10th of Shevat, is one of the most important days of the calendar for Chabad, with tens of thousands from around the world converging on the site to mark the 75th anniversary of the Lubavitcher Rebbe assuming the leadership role in 1951.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mamdani were among those who issued comments on Wednesday night. The governor said that “for the second day in a row, Jewish New Yorkers were the targets of antisemitic violence” and that “an attack against the Jewish community is an attack against all New Yorkers.”

The mayor, who has released several statements decrying antisemitism that has not related to anti-Zionism, said that the ramming at Chabad “is deeply alarming, especially given the deep meaning and history of the institution to so many in New York and around the world.”

“Any threat to a Jewish institution or place of worship must be taken seriously,” added the mayor, who is reportedly considering two people, who are said to be anti-Chassidic, to run the city office to combat Jew-hatred. “Antisemitism has no place in our city, and violence or intimidation against Jewish New Yorkers is unacceptable.”

Dan Mannarino, of PIX11 News, asked Mamdani about the incident on Thursday.

“I was there on the scene last night at 770 Chabad world headquarters, and it was a horrifying incident where a man repeatedly and intentionally crashed his car into the building,” the mayor said. “I am so thankful that no one was hurt, and we know that this is a building that has immense meaning to so many Jewish New Yorkers and those across the world.”

The mayor said that the attack “took place on the yahrzeit of Rabbi Schneerson and the leadership of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, and this is just a day after the day when we remember the victims of the Holocaust.”

“We know that antisemitism is not simply something of the past to be learned about. It is a living, breathing thing that we have to combat every day,” he told PIX11.

‘A deeply disturbing act of violence’

Asked, in light of the New York City Council’s scheduled announcement of a task force to fight Jew-hatred, when he would name a leader to the mayoral office to combat antisemitism, Mamdani said that “we are actually in our final interviews for that position.”

“That is going to be a key position that delivers on our commitment to root out antisemitism across the five boroughs and make this a city where Jewish New Yorkers are not just safe but frankly celebrated and cherished,” the mayor said.

“Sometime next week?” Mannarino asked.

“We’re working on the timeline, but it is in the final stages,” Mamdani said.

The Orthodox Union stated that it stands “with the Chabad community and is thankful to the Almighty that there were no injuries in the disturbing car-ramming incident outside 770 Eastern Parkway, a place that holds deep meaning for many Jews around the world.”

“This incident is the latest reminder of the sacred responsibility of those in positions of authority to prioritize the safety and security of the Jewish community, especially during this time of unprecedented threats,” the OU said.

Yaacov Behrman, a Chabad spokesman, stated that the driver had trespassed previously at a Chabad house in New Jersey. CBS News reported that Sohail told people at the Chabad that he was homeless and wanted to convert to Judaism. Counselors called to the scene reportedly recommended that he seek mental health counseling.

Additional media reports suggested that Sohail was denied access to a yeshiva in the Garden State.

Motti Seligson, a spokesman for the Chabad movement, stated that the site where the ramming took place is “perhaps the most replicated building in the world because of the light, joy, Torah and a confident Judaism that emanates from it to all corners of the world.”

Both New York senators weighed in.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said that “770 is not simply a religious institution. It’s an important spiritual home for the Chabad Jewish community, and this antisemitic attack against it is deeply disturbing.”

“This blatant act of antisemitism is not only an attack on this one building but an attack on Jewish people across New York and the world,” stated Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.). “Chabad headquarters is a faith home for so many, and this is a deeply disturbing act of violence.”

Harmeet Dhillon, U.S. assistant attorney general for civil rights, said that she initiated a civil-rights investigation of the incident. JNS

{Matzav.com}

Sources: Trump Plans To Name Kevin Warsh As Next Fed Chair

President Trump is expected to announce Friday that he intends to appoint Kevin Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve, replacing Jerome Powell, according to a report by the New York Post.

Sources told the Post that Trump met with Warsh on Thursday and later followed up with a phone call to ask whether he would accept the position. Warsh agreed, those sources said.

Rick Reider, a senior executive at BlackRock who had emerged in recent days as a serious contender for the role, was informed Thursday that he would not be selected, according to people familiar with the matter.

The remaining leading contenders — National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett and Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller — have recently seen their chances diminish.

White House officials cautioned that the decision is not final and noted that Trump could still reverse course.

Speaking with reporters after his meeting with Warsh on Thursday, Trump said he planned to disclose his choice for Fed chair on Friday morning, reversing an earlier plan to wait until next week.

“It’s going to be somebody…that’s known to everybody in the financial world,” Trump said late Thursday. “A lot of people think that this is somebody that could’ve been there a few years ago.”

Trump had previously weighed selecting Warsh for the role eight years ago, before ultimately choosing Jerome Powell.

At 55, Warsh is widely viewed as an interest-rate hawk, a stance that may reassure markets concerned about the Federal Reserve’s independence. At the same time, Warsh has sharply criticized Powell — echoing Trump’s views — for expanding the money supply during the Biden years, which both men blame for fueling inflation.

The timing of the move surprised many observers and underscored Trump’s reputation for unpredictability. Just weeks ago, Kevin Hassett was widely considered the front-runner to succeed Powell, whose term expires in May.

That changed after the Post reported that prominent CEOs had expressed concern that Hassett was overly aligned with MAGA-style economic policies, raising fears of market volatility. Following that reporting, Trump began evaluating alternative candidates.

Although Trump appointed Powell early in his first term, he has intensified his criticism of the Fed over the past year, repeatedly arguing that it should slash interest rates even as inflation remains well above the central bank’s 2% target.

On Wednesday, Powell sidestepped questions about his future at the Fed and about a criminal probe initiated by the Trump administration. He did, however, offer pointed advice to whoever succeeds him.

“Stay out of elected politics, don’t get pulled into elected politics. Don’t do it,” Powell said at his regular press conference after the Fed’s latest monetary policy decision.

{Matzav.com}

Belz Receives Final Approval to Expand Its World Center in Yerushalayim

An emotional announcement was made this week in Belz, as the chassidus received final authorization to expand its massive bais medrash building at the Belzer center in Yerushalayim, a complex that has long struggled to accommodate the tens of thousands of chassidim who come to spend time in the presence of the belzer Rebbe.

Belz was the first chassidus to establish a massive world center of this scale in Yerushalayim, a model that was later followed by many other chassidic courts. Over the years, the central Beis Medrash has increasingly proven too small for the crowds that gather there from Eretz Yisroel and around the world.

The approval was granted on the Belzer Yom Hatzalah, the day observed in Belz to mark the miraculous rescue after the Holocaust of the brothers, the Belzer Rebbe, Rav Aharon of Belz, and his brother, the Bilgorayer Rav, who arrived in Eretz Yisroel destitute and with nothing but their lives. The day was established by Rav Aharon of Belz himself as a yom tov of thanksgiving and gratitude to Hashem.

After years of effort and persistence by askanim, led by Michel Halberstam, a member of the Yerushalayim city council, and communal activist Zevi Farkash, final approval was granted to allow continued development of the Belzer world center. Construction of the complex began more than four decades ago, built with extraordinary mesirus nefesh by the Belzer Rebbe and his chassidim.

Under the approved plan, the main Beis Medrash will be expanded on its eastern, western, and southern sides. In addition, the “Groyse Shtub,” the main tish hall, will be rebuilt into a vast multi-level space featuring surrounding galleries, significantly increasing capacity for major gatherings, tishen, and Yomim Tovim.

Within the chassidus, special recognition was given to the Beis Medrash’s architect and devoted askan Aharon Ostreicher, who invested years of planning and tireless work with multiple authorities to bring the project forward. Appreciation was also expressed for Elimelech Landman, who provided sustained assistance and support to the askanim throughout the process.

The administration of the Beis Medrash also thanked Yerushalayim Mayor Moshe Lion and his deputy, Eliezer Rauchberger, chairman of Degel HaTorah and head of the city’s Planning and Building Committee, for standing firmly alongside the community and offering meaningful assistance until the long-awaited final approval was granted.

{Matzav.com}

After Recent Fall on Way to Mikvah, Slonimer Rebbe Set to Depart for U.S. Visit

The Slonimer Rebbe is scheduled to depart early Sunday morning for the United States, where he will undertake a chizuk visit with his chassidim, focusing this time on the Slonimer community in Monsey.

The Rebbe, who traditionally visits his American followers once a year, alternates destinations between Boro Park, Monsey, and Lakewood. On this trip, he will remain exclusively in Monsey, where hundreds of chassidim are expected to gather.

The centerpiece of the visit will be a large Shabbos gathering for Parshas Yisro in Monsey, with chassidim traveling in from Boro Park and Lakewood as well. Throughout the visit, the Rebbe will receive individuals for personal counsel and brachah.

It was learned that the Rebbe suffered a fall last week while walking to the mikvah, sustaining injuries to his face along with a strong blow to his leg and arm. Despite the incident, b’siyata d’Shmaya, the 81-year-old Rebbe has continued his regular daily schedule without interruption.

The fall occurred during the early morning hours as the Rebbe was walking alone from his residence on Rechov Rashbam in Bnei Brak to the mikvah, a route he had customarily taken without accompaniment. Since the incident, the Rebbe has been accompanied each morning.

Ahead of his departure to the United States, the Rebbe visited the Kosel this week.

{Matzav.com}

Children’s Ward Moved by Letter From Rav Dov Kook

Staff members at the pediatric ward of the Poriya Medical Center were deeply moved this week after receiving a handwritten letter of brocha from the tzaddik of Tiveriah, Rav Dov Kook.

The letter, sent via the rov’s aide, was addressed to hospital management and the doctors and nurses of the children’s department. In his message, Rav Kook offered words of encouragement and chizuk to the medical staff caring for young patients.

The letter read: “Shevat 5786. To the honorable doctors and nurses of the children’s department at Poriya Hospital, may you receive Heavenly assistance to be good emissaries for the healing of the children of Yisroel. And whoever sustains one soul of Yisroel, it is as if he sustained an entire world.”

Hospital officials expressed great appreciation for the letter and the spirit behind it. It was also learned that over the past winter, families who required treatment at the hospital shared their experiences with Rav Kook, speaking about the care and attention they received. In recent months, representatives close to the rov and the hospital’s leadership have been working cooperatively to bridge gaps and provide a more effective and compassionate response to patients, as well as to additional communities in the city of Tiveriah.

{Matzav.com}

Gal Hirsch Reveals: Sinwar Planned to Hold Hostages for 10 Years

Gal Hirsch, Israel’s coordinator for captives and missing persons, has revealed new and deeply troubling details about Hamas’s strategy regarding the Israeli hostages, saying that arch-terrorist Yahya Sinwar ym”sh intended to keep them as a long-term bargaining asset for up to a decade.

Speaking in an interview with Amit Segal in Yisroel Hayom, Hirsch said Sinwar viewed the hostages as an investment designed to generate leverage over “10 years of negotiations.” Hirsch described how Israeli authorities internally categorized the captives based on intelligence assessments and rescue prospects. “We classified the hostages as Ron Arads, those with concern they may never be found; Wachsman cases — hostages in a known location but with low chances of rescue; Regev and Goldwasser — fallen soldiers; or Shalits, those who are returned in a deal,” Hirsch said.

Hirsch recounted the scale of the crisis in the immediate aftermath of October 7. “On the evening of October 8 I realized we were missing 3,200 people. In the second week, 1,060. Later, 400,” he said. During the second week, Israeli officials even considered granting American citizenship to all hostages, after Hamas hinted it might prioritize releasing captives with foreign nationality.

According to Hirsch, there was often an unbearable gap between the quality of intelligence and the slim chances of a successful rescue. “There were cases where one of our units was at the door, but we knew we wouldn’t achieve the vital seconds needed for extraction, so we gave up,” he said.

Hirsch also described how Qatar became the central mediator. He said he called a senior Qatari official, who offered his country’s mediation services. When asked how he could prove he could deliver results, Hirsch recalled replying, “Take out hostages.” The Qatari official then went south to Gaza to supervise a pilot release. The following day, Yehudit and Natalie Raanan were freed, followed later by the release of Yocheved Lifshitz and Nurit Cooper via Egypt. From that point on, Qatar formally assumed the role of mediator.

Addressing the issue of disarmament in Gaza, Amit Segal wrote that Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff noticed skeptical looks during meetings in the Prime Minister’s Office — looks that conveyed doubt over the idea that Hamas would ever disarm voluntarily without direct Israeli military action. “I was born at night,” Kushner told them, “but I wasn’t born last night.” American officials stressed that they had no illusions about Hamas or Gaza’s population, noting that not a single person had called the IDF hotline established for turning in hostages. They added that even in Nazi Germany there were Righteous Among the Nations — and that was without the promise of a $5 million reward.

Still, a senior American official said the most likely outcome remains the destruction of Hamas by Israeli forces. “Still, most chances are that the destruction of Hamas will ultimately be carried out by IDF soldiers,” the official said. “But what do you care if we start the demilitarization peacefully? It’s clear Hamas is stalling, and it’s clear it will want to keep weapons, but what happens if, for example, only 10,000 Kalashnikovs are handed over and only 50 tunnels are destroyed without fighting — how does that hurt? You and we are not in a rush anywhere. It will only save work for the IDF.”

{Matzav.com}

WATCH: Atzeres Chizuk Held at Beth Medrash Govoha to Encourage Yungeleit to Go Out of Town

An atzeres chizuk for yungeleit was held this week at Bais Medrash Govoha’s Bais Medrash Ateres Esther in Lakewood, NJ, focused on encouraging yungeleit to consider moving out of town to help build and enhance kollelim, mekomos haTorah and communities there.

The gathering featured divrei chizuk from Rav Yisroel Neuman, rosh yeshiva of Bais Medrash Govoha, and Rav Elya Chaim Swerdloff, rosh yeshiva of Yeshiva Gedolah of Paterson.

WATCH:

WOKE: Sherrill Administration Plans Portal for New Jersey Residents to Report ICE Acitivity

New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill’s administration is preparing to launch a statewide online system that would allow residents to submit reports, videos, and other documentation of encounters with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, an initiative modeled on similar efforts used by activists to monitor federal immigration activity.

Sherrill, a Democrat who was sworn into office earlier this month, revealed the plan Wednesday during an interview on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show.”

“We are also going to be standing up a portal so people can upload all their cellphone videos and alert people,” Sherrill said. “If you see an ICE agent in the street, get your phone out. We want to know.”

ICE did not immediately provide a response when asked to comment on the governor’s remarks.

In addition to the reporting system, Sherrill said her administration intends to bar ICE from conducting operations on state-owned property. Several local governments, including Jersey City, have already enacted similar prohibitions at the municipal level.

“They have not been forthcoming,” Sherrill said of ICE operations. “They will pick people up. They will not tell us who they are.”

The governor, who has frequently clashed with Republican President Donald Trump, argued that ICE routinely withholds information about arrests and conducts itself in a manner comparable to a clandestine law enforcement agency.

“They’ll pick up American citizens. They picked up a 5-year-old child. We want documentation, and we’re going to make sure we get it,” Sherrill said.

Following her television appearance, the governor’s office said more information about the reporting portal would be released soon. The administration said the rollout is being coordinated with Jennifer Davenport, who was recently appointed acting attorney general of New Jersey.

“Keeping New Jerseyans safe is Gov. Sherrill’s top priority, and in the coming days she and Acting Attorney General Davenport will announce additional actions to protect New Jerseyans from federal overreach,” the governor’s office said in a statement.

New Jersey’s plan comes after comparable action in New York, where Attorney General Letitia James announced a program in October to gather photos and videos of ICE activity following a widely publicized enforcement operation on Canal Street in New York City, a neighborhood with a large immigrant population.

State officials said any submissions to New Jersey’s system would be reviewed by the Office of the Attorney General to determine whether there were potential violations of state law.

Officials elsewhere have also signaled a willingness to challenge ICE through the courts. In Pennsylvania, Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner has said he is prepared to pursue state-level charges against ICE agents in certain situations.

At the federal level, members of New Jersey’s congressional delegation said this week that they are organizing legal observer training sessions to teach the public how to document immigration enforcement actions.

U.S. Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman of New Jersey said continued scrutiny of ICE is necessary.

“Their crimes must be recorded for the day when those who have violated our rights face justice,” Watson Coleman, D-12th Dist., said. “It’s up to us to serve as witnesses now.”

{Matzav.com}

Man Accused of Rock Attack on NJ School Bus Now Held by ICE

A suspect charged in a violent rock-throwing attack on a school bus on the New Jersey Turnpike that seriously injured an 8-year-old student has been taken into custody by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, officials said.

Authorities identified the man as Hernando Garcia-Morales of Teaneck. The Department of Homeland Security described him as an illegal alien from Mexico with a lengthy criminal record accumulated while living in New Jersey.

According to DHS, Garcia-Morales was arrested in 2023 on burglary charges. Records also show a 2006 arrest for weapons possession and theft.

The attack occurred at about 2 p.m. on January 7 as a school bus was returning to Yeshivat Noam, a Jewish day school, after a class trip to the Liberty Science Center, officials said.

As the bus approached the area near Exit 70A-B in Teaneck, Garcia-Morales allegedly hurled a baseball-sized rock at the vehicle. The impact shattered a window and caused a fractured skull to a third-grade girl, who later required surgery, authorities said.

Two days after the incident, New Jersey State Police arrested Garcia-Morales. He was charged with aggravated assault, unlawful possession of a weapon, endangering the welfare of a child, criminal mischief, resisting arrest by flight, and hindering apprehension, police said.

Investigators said Garcia-Morales was located at a makeshift campsite he had set up inside Old Croaker County Park in Bergen County following a state police-led investigation.

State police also said the investigation connected him to several other rock-throwing incidents reported in Bogota Borough, also in Bergen County.

DHS said Garcia-Morales entered the United States at an unknown time and location.

“Violently targeting a school bus full of children is extremely wicked and heinous,” DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement. “Hernando Garcia-Morales should have never been in this country, let alone released after multiple arrests into New Jersey communities.”

{Matzav.com}

Senate Strikes Deal To Avert Partial Shutdown

The Senate reached an agreement Thursday evening to keep much of the federal government operating, finalizing a plan just one day before a looming shutdown deadline.

Under the deal, funding for the Department of Homeland Security will be carved out from a broader package that includes five other major appropriations bills. Instead of advancing DHS funding as part of that bundle, the Senate will move forward with a short-term continuing resolution that maintains DHS funding at current levels through February 13.

Negotiations over the temporary funding measure had focused on how long the stopgap should last. Democrats pushed for a two-week extension, which ultimately became part of the agreement, while Republicans had argued for a six-week continuation.

Two sources familiar with the talks confirmed the arrangement, noting that Republican leaders were still reviewing the details with rank-and-file members to determine whether changes or amendments might be required.

The remaining five appropriations bills — covering Defense, Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, Health and Human Services, Labor, and Education — are designed to fund those departments for the full fiscal year. If enacted, they would provide funding for roughly 96 percent of the federal government through fiscal year 2026. Senate votes on the package were expected Thursday night.

President Trump signaled support for the agreement in a post on Truth Social.

“I am working hard with Congress to ensure that we are able to fully fund the Government, without delay. Republicans and Democrats in Congress have come together to get the vast majority of the Government funded until September, while at the same time providing an extension to the Department of Homeland Security (including the very important Coast Guard, which we are expanding and rebuilding like never before),” he wrote.

“Hopefully, both Republicans and Democrats will give a very much needed Bipartisan ‘YES’ Vote,” he added.

If the Senate approves the funding measures, attention will then shift to the House, which will be responsible for taking up the bills in the coming days.

The House is not expected to reconvene until Monday, making a brief funding lapse likely. Uncertainty also remains about how smoothly the legislation will move through the chamber, as some Republicans have already called for revisions to the bills.

Democrats had previously warned they would block the entire six-bill funding package unless the DHS measure was removed, following the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse, by Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis on Saturday.

That backlash left Republicans on the defensive and led the administration to take steps aimed at easing tensions.

Discussions between Democratic leaders and the White House intensified Wednesday night, setting the stage for Thursday’s agreement.

“Hopefully, we won’t have a shutdown. We’re working on that right now. I think we’re getting close. The Democrats, I don’t believe want to see it either,” President Trump said during a Cabinet meeting earlier Thursday. “So we’ll work in a very bipartisan way, I believe, not to have a shutdown.”

The compromise leaves lawmakers with only a narrow window to reach a longer-term solution for DHS funding for the remainder of the year.

On Wednesday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York said Democrats are pressing three conditions in renewed DHS negotiations: ending roving patrols by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and tightening warrant requirements; increasing oversight by establishing a universal code of conduct; and mandating body cameras for agents while barring them from wearing masks.

“Under President Trump, Secretary Noem and Stephen Miller, ICE has been unleashed without guardrails,” Schumer said. “They violate constitutional rights all the time and deliberately refuse to coordinate with state and local law enforcement.”

{Matzav.com}

Trump Sends Personal Letter to Netanyahu, Promises to Visit Bat Yam Promenade

President Donald Trump sent a personal letter to Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, thanking him for advancing the decision to name a new seaside promenade in Bat Yam after the American president and expressing appreciation for the gesture.

According to a report by Ynet, the letter arrived unexpectedly in Israel and included a photograph from the groundbreaking ceremony for the promenade, personally signed by Trump. On the photo, the president wrote, “Bibi, This is so great. Thank you. Donald.”

The groundbreaking ceremony took place about four months ago and was attended by Netanyahu, Bat Yam Mayor Tzvika Brot, and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee. During the event, Huckabee photographed the beachfront and informed those present that he had sent the images directly to Trump. Shortly afterward, Huckabee announced that the president had “promised to visit the promenade.”

In the photograph signed by Trump, Netanyahu and Brot are seen laying the cornerstone for the new promenade together, with Ambassador Huckabee standing alongside them. In his letter, Trump thanked the prime minister for his role in promoting the project.

Ynet further reported that construction work on the promenade is currently ongoing and is expected to be completed within the next few months. Once finished, Trump is expected to receive a formal invitation to inaugurate the promenade during one of his future visits to Israel, together with the prime minister and the mayor of Bat Yam.

{Matzav.com}

New Poll Examines Potential Bennett–Lapid–Eisenkot Alliance, Finds It Could Become Israel’s Largest Party

A new poll published Thursday night examines the political impact of a possible three-way alliance between Naftali Bennett, Yair Lapid, and former IDF chief of staff Gadi Eisenkot, indicating that such a joint list could dramatically reshape Israel’s political map.

According to a Channel 12 News survey, no political bloc currently has a clear path to forming a government without support from the Joint List or parts of it. Under the present scenario, the Likud, led by Benjamin Netanyahu, would emerge as the largest party with 27 seats. Naftali Bennett’s party would place second with 21 mandates, followed by the Joint List with 12 seats and the Democrats with 11.

Shas and Eisenkot’s party, Yashar, would each receive nine seats. Yesh Atid, Yisrael Beytenu, and Otzma Yehudit would secure eight seats apiece, while United Torah Judaism would be the smallest faction in the Knesset with seven mandates.

The survey also assessed the effect of a partial consolidation. In that scenario, the Joint List would gain two additional seats, effectively weakening the so-called “change bloc” by one mandate. The opposition would stand at 57 seats, compared to just 51 for the current coalition. Several parties would fail to cross the electoral threshold, including Religious Zionism (2.9%), Blue and White (1.8%), and the Reservists party led by Yoaz Hendel (1%).

However, the most striking results emerged when the poll examined Eisenkot’s proposal for a full merger with Bennett and Yair Lapid. In that case, the unified list would surge to 38 seats, making it the largest party in Israel by a wide margin, while Likud would remain steady at 27 seats.

In this scenario, the Joint List would retain 12 mandates and the Democrats 11. Shas would again receive nine seats, with Yisrael Beytenu and Otzma Yehudit each winning eight. United Torah Judaism would remain the smallest faction, holding seven seats.

At the same time, a separate poll released by Channel 14 painted a very different picture. That survey showed the right-wing bloc strengthening significantly, reaching 64 seats, compared to 43 for the left-wing bloc. Arab parties would collectively receive 13 mandates.

In the Channel 14 results, Likud would lead with 34 seats, followed by the Joint List with 13. Bennett’s party would receive 12 seats, and Shas would gain 10. The Democrats and United Torah Judaism would each secure nine seats, as would Yisrael Beytenu.

Otzma Yehudit and Yashar would each stand at seven mandates, while Yesh Atid would fall to six. Religious Zionism would receive four seats, and Blue and White would fail to pass the electoral threshold, polling at just 3%.

{Matzav.com}

Russian Drone Strike Hits Home of Chabad Shliach in Kryvyi Rih; Family Unharmed

A Russian drone struck near the residence of Rabbi Liron Edri, the rabbi of the Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih, on Thursday night, causing damage to his home. No injuries were reported, as Rabbi Edri and his family were away at the time of the impact.

Kryvyi Rih, home to more than 500,000 people, is among Ukraine’s largest urban centers and serves as the heart of the country’s steel industry. The city is also recognized as the birthplace of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and has an estimated Jewish population of about 5,000.

Jewish leaders in Ukraine say attacks affecting Jewish sites have become so frequent that they have stopped keeping a precise tally. In just the last six months, more than ten incidents involving synagogues, rabbis’ residences, and Jewish cemeteries have been documented, with some cases suspected of being deliberate.

Describing the broader reality facing civilians, Rabbi Edri said, “People are freezing from the cold due to Russian attacks targeting electricity and energy facilities. It is a very difficult and challenging winter, and we need a great deal of heavenly mercy, but they will not break us. I, together with my fellow Chabad emissaries throughout Ukraine, am staying here to help the communities.”

In a statement, the Federation of Jewish Communities of Ukraine expressed support for the rabbi and those remaining in the country. The organization said, “We strengthen the hands of Rabbi Edri, who works in his city with astonishing dedication. It is very important that the world not forget the hundreds of thousands of Jews living here, as well as the hundreds of Chabad emissary families who did not leave Ukraine and remain here under constant bombardment, enduring terrible and threatening conditions, without electricity and sometimes without water. At the same time, we will continue to adhere to our mission and intensify it even further.”

{Matzav.com}

‘The Big Plan’: Trump Considers Extensive Strike on Iran

President Donald Trump has reviewed a series of potential military and non-military actions aimed at Iran, options that were jointly prepared by senior officials at the White House and the Pentagon, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

Among the proposals shown to the president is an expansive air campaign known internally as “the big plan,” which would involve widespread strikes against key installations linked to Iran’s ruling clerical leadership and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Other alternatives outlined to Trump include more limited attacks on sites viewed as emblematic of the Iranian regime, paired with the possibility of widening the scope of operations if Tehran continues advancing its nuclear program. The menu of options also includes non-kinetic measures, such as cyber operations targeting Iran’s banking system, along with harsher economic penalties.

Officials in Israel have cautioned that a narrowly focused strike would likely fall short of bringing down Iran’s leadership. Sources in Jerusalem say that although Trump had previously been open to actions that might result in regime change, he now assesses that military force alone would not accomplish that objective. Instead, his current thinking is said to prioritize strikes on tangible assets, particularly nuclear-related facilities and potentially missile infrastructure.

Meanwhile, several Gulf countries — including Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar, and Oman — are engaged in coordinated efforts to broker dialogue between Washington and Tehran to avert a broader conflict. Despite the current diplomatic impasse, leaders in the region maintain that a negotiated off-ramp remains possible.

{Matzav.com}

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