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NYC Mayor Mamdani Tries Distancing Himself From Top Official Describing Home Ownership As “White Supremacy”

Yeshiva World News -

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani publicly distanced himself from past statements made by one of his top housing officials that described home ownership as a “weapon of white supremacy,” as scrutiny mounts over the official’s rhetoric and record. Mamdani addressed the controversy during an interview with PIX11 anchor Henry Rosoff, after Rosoff pressed him […]

Braverman Released After Lengthy Police Questioning, Barred From Prime Minister’s Office

Matzav -

Tzachi Braverman, chief of staff to Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, was released late last night following more than 12 hours of police questioning, but was ordered to stay away from the Prime Minister’s Office as the investigation continues.

Braverman was freed under restrictive conditions, including a ban on contacting others involved in the case, a 30-day prohibition on leaving the country, and a 15-day suspension from entering the Prime Minister’s Office. The move further deepens the disruption within the prime minister’s inner circle, after senior aide Yonatan Urich has already been kept away from the office for an extended period.

Another Prime Minister’s Office employee, Omer Mansour, a member of the communications staff, was also released under identical conditions. Mansour is currently suspected of obstruction of justice.

Earlier in the day, Eli Feldstein was released after being brought in for questioning in parallel with Braverman, in order to conduct a face-to-face confrontation between the two. Braverman was questioned following Feldstein’s claim, made in an interview with Israel’s public broadcaster, that the chief of staff attempted to interfere with the investigation into the leak of documents to the German newspaper Bild.

According to details reported by Kan News, during the confrontation Feldstein told Braverman that he “knows the truth.” Braverman responded that “there were meetings that dealt with other matters.” Mansour, who investigators say was present at a clandestine meeting between the two in an underground parking garage at the Kirya military complex, told police that he “does not remember” the details of the incident.

Mansour, who had previously categorically denied that such an event took place after the report about him surfaced several days ago, is considered a key witness in the affair. According to the allegations, he was the one who held the mobile phones of Feldstein and Braverman during that meeting.

Braverman’s attorney, Jacques Chen, said in a statement: “The chief of staff in the Prime Minister’s Office, Mr. Braverman, has concluded his police questioning and returned home. During his interrogation, he answered all investigators’ questions and categorically denied a fabricated version of events put forward by a defendant who concealed it for a year and chose to present it in a television interview. Mr. Braverman was released by agreement under restrictive conditions, primarily a prohibition on contact with the Prime Minister’s Office and those involved in the investigation, as well as a short-term delay on leaving the country. We are convinced that at the conclusion of the investigation, the authorized authorities will announce that there is no truth to the claims of that unreliable defendant.”

The Likud party issued a sharp response, saying: “The warning-level investigation of Tzachi Braverman is nothing more than a continuation of the campaign of persecution against the prime minister and his staff. This is yet another attempt at phone ‘phishing,’ this time targeting the chief of staff, in order to look for something that could be used as leverage against him.

“By contrast, the State Attorney’s Office and the attorney general decided that the former military advocate general who threw her phone into the sea — and it was found only five days later — would receive kid-glove treatment, and people who met with her during the investigation have not been questioned to this day. Apparently, everything depends on which side of the political map you are on.”

{Matzav.com}

Ilhan Omar Urges Public To Film ICE Agents

Matzav -

[Video below.] Rep. Ilhan Omar urged Americans to document encounters with Immigration and Customs Enforcement and criticized the Trump administration for offering conclusions about the fatal shooting of Renee Good before investigators complete their work.

“It is really important for Americans to record, to create the level of accountability and transparency that we need,” the Minnesota lawmaker said Sunday on CBS News’ “Face the Nation.”

She described what she said were common ICE tactics in Minneapolis, telling the program, “What we’ve seen in Minneapolis is ICE agents oftentimes jumping out of their cars, these are unmarked cars, oftentimes they’re wearing a mask, they’re approaching, running towards cars.”

Authorities have said ICE officer Jonathan Ross shot Good after she drove her SUV toward him. Officials confirmed Ross recorded the encounter on his cellphone, and the video has been released publicly in recent days.

Ross was not wearing a body camera at the time of the incident. ICE Director Todd Lyons explained on Fox News’ “The Sunday Briefing” that the agency is “still in the process of deploying” body cameras.

Omar also charged that the Department of Homeland Security has repeatedly misrepresented facts surrounding high-profile ICE operations. Representing Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District, which includes Minneapolis, she said Good appeared frightened when agents approached and sharply criticized their actions.

“Renee Nicole Macklin Good as you hear her say, she’s not mad, she’s sitting in her car, peacefully waving cars to get by,” Omar said. “You see the other officer, who can clearly see the car is moving, move towards the front of the car.”

“If they are saying that he has 10 years on service and is trained, he should know that you shouldn’t be trying to get in front of a moving car.”

Video from the scene shows Ross positioned in front of Good’s SUV while it was stationary. When the vehicle began moving toward him, he fired three shots, killing her.

After the shooting, Ross was taken to a nearby hospital after he was “hit by the vehicle,” Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said, and later released.

Omar also faulted senior Trump administration officials for commenting publicly so soon after the shooting.

“We can see in the videos that have been produced so far that what they are describing is really not what had taken place,” Omar said. “This level of rhetoric is not justifiable to the American people.”

The congresswoman previously drew attention last year by saying ICE questioned her son, a claim the department has denied.

ICE activity in Minnesota has increased as the Trump administration responds to widespread outrage over a major welfare fraud scandal in the state.

Omar criticized the federal probe, arguing that “What they are doing is creating confusion, chaos, trying to intimidate people from being able to exercise their regular, normal activities.”

“There are ways to investigate fraud, which we have been doing in Minnesota, which the federal government has been doing under the Biden administration,” Omar said. “There is no reason for them to use this level of rhetoric.”

WATCH:

{Matzav.com}

Britain’s Chief Rabbi: Calling Gaza Genocide Trivializes The Word

Matzav -

Sir Ephraim Mirvis, the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, has spoken out against describing Israel’s military campaign in Gaza as “genocide,” saying the charge cheapens the word and transforms what he called “humanity’s gravest crime” into a tool of political rhetoric.

Writing in The Telegraph, Sir Ephraim Mirvis argued that the allegation is now deployed with alarming ease. As he put it: “Today it takes almost no thought to repeat the accusation that Israel has committed ‘genocide’.”

He noted that the accusation comes from different quarters and motivations. “Some repeat it from a place of singular hostility toward the world’s only Jewish state; others from an earnest desire to hasten an end to an unquestionably horrific conflict in which many innocent people have suffered. But whatever the motivation, the result is the same: this gravest of crimes is invoked casually, without due regard for the weight of the word itself.”

Mirvis went on to describe a public climate driven by exaggeration and online outrage. “In an age when hyperbole dominates our discourse and outrage is rewarded with clicks, campaigners reach instinctively for the most extreme language available. Faced with images on social media of immense, tragic suffering in Gaza, journalists, academics and celebrities understandably feel compelled to speak out.”

He cautioned that this escalation in language carries serious risks. “Yet the race to linguistic escalation has consequences. The ubiquity of a term is often wrongly understood as evidence of its veracity. And some terms have a meaning that must remain protected at all costs. ‘Genocide’ is one of them.”

Pointing to the legal standard for genocide, Mirvis stressed that the crime requires intent to destroy a people, in whole or in part. He explained: “It is why Britain and her allies are not accused of genocide for our strategic bombing of Nazi Germany, despite the hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians who were killed. Intent is the moral and legal hinge. The clearest evidence that Israel did not intend to destroy the people of Gaza is that it did not in fact do so.”

He characterized the war as one “Israel did not seek, nor start,” and said Israel’s aims have centered on freeing hostages and neutralizing Hamas, which he described as a group committed to Israel’s annihilation. He added: “If Hamas lays down its arms, there will be no fighting and no suffering. If Israel were to lay down its arms, there would be no Israel.”

The Chief Rabbi also took aim at certain human rights groups, saying they “appear to revel in misappropriating the term genocide” by stretching its definition and engaging in what he called “a truly troubling moral deceit.”

While acknowledging the dire humanitarian toll in Gaza, Mirvis said: “The tragic suffering of Palestinians abounds” and insisted that “no decent person could fail to be moved by it or wish to see its end”. At the same time, he maintained that there is no proof of “systematic massacres, mass executions, or the targeted killing of civilians as a matter of policy”.

He warned that careless use of the term ultimately corrodes its meaning. “When academics, activists, faith leaders and public figures declare, with unshakeable certainty, that genocide has occurred, they do something far more destructive than merely repeat a falsehood. They trivialise the very concept they claim to defend. What language is left for the Rohingya, expelled en masse, systematically raped and slaughtered? For the Uyghurs, subjected to mass internment, forced sterilisation and cultural erasure? For the ethnically targeted killing and mass rape in West Darfur? To invoke the term ‘genocide’ as an accusation against Israel is to strip it of its true meaning, reducing humanity’s gravest crime to a political insult.”

In closing, Mirvis called for compassion alongside moral clarity. “The suffering of innocent people demands empathy, accountability and a genuine commitment to preventing future conflict. But to level the charge of genocide against Israel is to commit a moral inversion whose casualties include not only Israelis and Palestinians, but the very idea of human rights itself.”

{Matzav.com}

‘Military Not Ready’: Report: US Commanders Tell Trump To Delay Any Iran Attack

Matzav -

President Donald Trump has been advised by senior military leaders that preparations are not yet complete for any possible military action against Iran, even as protests against the Islamic Republic intensify across the country, according to a report by The Telegraph.

The report said Trump has reviewed a variety of potential military responses and has been briefed on possible targets tied to Iran’s internal security forces, especially those linked to the crackdown on demonstrators. Commanders overseeing US forces in the region, however, have warned that troops need additional time to reinforce defenses and secure positions before taking steps that could trigger Iranian retaliation.

Trump has openly warned Tehran that continued killings of protesters could prompt US intervention, saying Iran would be struck “very, very hard, where it hurts.” According to The Telegraph, he has been presented with scenarios that include attacks on regime-linked security elements or non-military sites in Tehran.

The discussions are unfolding as unrest has erupted across Iran for multiple nights in a row, with analysts describing the scope and intensity as surpassing the 2022 protests over the hijab law. While reports suggest that hundreds of people may have been killed, a sweeping internet shutdown has made it difficult to confirm casualty figures. Videos circulating online appear to show security forces firing live ammunition at crowds in several areas.

Iranian leaders have responded with stark warnings, including threats of capital punishment for protesters. Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf cautioned the White House against a “miscalculation,” while a former commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned that any attack would lead to retaliation against Israel, US military installations, and naval assets.

Axios reported Sunday that Trump is reviewing several avenues to back the protest movement and intensify pressure on the Iranian government, citing two US officials. While military strikes have been part of internal discussions, most of the options under consideration were described as non-kinetic, and no final determination has been reached. Officials told Axios that all options remain under consideration as demonstrations persist despite a harsher crackdown and ongoing internet blackout.

Iranian officials have blamed both the United States and Israel for fueling the unrest and have warned of consequences if Iran is attacked. Despite the widespread protests, US and Israeli officials quoted by Axios said there is no current assessment that the regime is on the brink of collapse.

{Matzav.com}

Netanyahu Signs Major Security Pact With Germany: ‘Natural Partners’

Matzav -

Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu on Tuesday finalized a joint declaration with Germany’s Interior Minister, Alexander Dobrindt, establishing a broad security cooperation framework between the two nations. The agreement formalizes collaboration among Israeli and German security agencies in fields including cybersecurity, cutting-edge technology, policing, counterterrorism efforts, and civil defense.

“I attach enormous importance to the overall cooperation between Israel and Germany, and especially Israel and Germany on this question of cybersecurity, which is one of the main threats to our internal security, and in many ways also our infrastructure and other threats,” Netanyahu stated.

Expanding on the depth of bilateral ties, the prime minister pointed to existing joint projects and ongoing defense coordination between Jerusalem and Berlin. “And I think Germany and Israel are natural partners. We’ve cooperated on the Arrow III; we’ve cooperated in many areas. We cooperate technologically. Chancellor Mertz was here recently, and we talked about defense cooperation,” he added.

Netanyahu closed his remarks by welcoming the German interior minister and emphasizing the personal and diplomatic significance of the agreement. “And now I’m very pleased to welcome a dear friend of Israel, Minister Dobrindt, to sign this important pact. So, thank you for your friendship, thank you for your support, and please convey this to your government as well.”

{Matzav.com}

Hamas Prepares Gaza Handover Under Trump’s Board Of Peace Plan

Yeshiva World News -

Hamas says it has ordered its agencies in Gaza to prepare to hand over control to a new Palestinian governing body under President Trump’s Board of Peace. * Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem said the move is meant to facilitate the handover under Trump’s 20-point peace plan. * The Board of Peace is expected to be […]

From Hatzolah Hero to Eternal Legacy

Yeshiva World News -

  Why This Raffle? R’ Mendy Rosenberg z”l was a devoted Hatzolah member who saved lives and helped thousands. After being diagnosed with ALS, he endured years of suffering — yet still completed the entire Shas, inspiring Klal Yisrael with his strength and faith. He left behind his wife and five children. Mendy’s Legacy Fund […]

Homan: ICE Shooting May Meet Domestic Terrorism Definition

Matzav -

[Video below.] White House border czar Tom Homan said Sunday that the conduct of Minneapolis shooting victim Renee Good before she was killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer could meet the legal standard for domestic terrorism, echoing claims made by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other administration officials.

“I don’t know what Secretary Noem knows,” Homan said during an appearance on NBC’s Meet the Press. “If you look up the definition of terrorism, it can fall under that definition.”

Good was fatally shot in the head during a confrontation with ICE agents. Administration officials have maintained that the shooting was an act of self-defense, asserting that Good attempted to strike veteran ICE agent Jonathan Ross with her vehicle before he opened fire.

“We’ve all got to agree there’s no reason … to do what she did,” Homan said Sunday. “There’s no reason to be there.”

“If you want to protest, protest; but don’t actively impede and interfere and certainly don’t drive a 4,000-pound vehicle toward an officer,” he added.

Homan described the incident as “tragic” while urging the public to allow investigators to complete their work. He also warned that what he called “hateful rhetoric” has contributed to a rise in violence directed at federal law enforcement officers.

He cautioned that widely circulated video clips do not provide a complete picture of the encounter, noting that investigators are still reviewing forensic and ballistic evidence, along with additional footage that may not yet be public.

“Look, it’s tragic,” Homan said. “I’ve said from March that if the hateful rhetoric doesn’t decline, there will be bloodshed. I’ve seen it before, and unfortunately, I was right. There’s been a lot of bloodshed.”

According to Homan, understanding the officer’s state of mind is a key element in determining whether the shooting was justified, saying the circumstances could support a self-defense claim.

“You have to put yourself in the mind of the officer,” he said. “I truly believe this officer, in his mind, thought his mind was in danger, which allows him to use lethal force.”

Homan repeatedly stressed that conclusions should be withheld until the investigation is finished.

“Let the investigation play out,” he said. “There’s a lot of video we probably haven’t seen that the FBI has that we don’t. Where’s the forensics and the ballistics?”

He also pushed back against public commentary branding the officer a criminal before investigators have reached their findings.

“Saying this officer is a murderer is dangerous,” Homan said. “It’s just ridiculous. It’s going to infuriate people more.”

Asked whether he had evidence to justify labeling Good’s actions as terrorism, Homan said he was not prepared to second-guess Noem, while reiterating his view that the behavior captured on video was unlawful.

Homan went on to criticize Minnesota’s immigration policies, arguing that federal agents were operating in Minneapolis because state and local leaders restrict cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.

“Why are we in Minneapolis?” Homan said. “Because it’s a sanctuary city and a sanctuary state.”

He said ICE was focused on apprehending “dangerous” individuals and emphasized that interfering with federal officers is a crime.

“It’s not OK to impede and interfere with an officer,” he said. “They’re arresting bad people, and it’s illegal. What she did is a crime.

“It’s illegal to impede law enforcement officers, and that’s why we’re there.”

Homan also defended the FBI’s leadership of the investigation after some local officials complained about being sidelined, saying such cases are routinely handled at the federal level when a federal officer is involved.

“This is a federal crime,” he said. “When a federal officer is in a shooting, it falls under the FBI. It’s been that way forever.”

WATCH:

{Matzav.com}

Second Lakewood Asifa Addresses Growing Concerns Over AI With Local Roshei Yeshiva [PHOTOS & VIDEO]

Yeshiva World News -

A second asifa addressing the growing impact of artificial intelligence was held Thursday night in Lakewood, drawing senior rabbinic leadership and continuing a discussion that began earlier this week. The gathering focused on concerns surrounding AI-driven calling, texting, and content generation, and followed an initial asifah that drew dozens of leading rabbanim and roshei yeshiva, […]

“Make a Deal”: Trump Issues Decisive Ultimatum to Cuba After Maduro’s Ouster

Yeshiva World News -

President Donald Trump on Sunday fired off another warning to the government of Cuba as the close ally of Venezuela braces for potential widespread unrest after Nicolás Maduro was deposed as Venezuela’s leader. Cuba, a major beneficiary of Venezuelan oil, has now been cut off from those shipments as U.S. forces continue to seize tankers in an effort to control the production, refining and global distribution of […]

Kristi Noem Clashes With CNN’s Jake Tapper Over Minneapolis ICE Shooting: ‘You Don’t Get To Change The Facts’

Matzav -

[Video below.] Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem clashed sharply with CNN anchor Jake Tapper on Sunday as she defended Immigration and Customs Enforcement following the fatal shooting of Renee Good, telling the host he cannot “change the facts” simply because he does not “like them.”

During a tense exchange on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Tapper pressed Noem on how she could so quickly label Good a “domestic terrorist” and publicly back ICE officer Jonathan Ross only hours after the incident.

“Everything that I’ve said has been proven to be factual,” Noem responded during the interview.

“[I] decided that the department and the people of this country deserve to know the truth of the situation of what has unfolded in Minneapolis.”

Tapper then zeroed in on Noem’s early description of the shooting last Wednesday, when she said ICE officers “were attempting to push out their vehicle, and a woman attacked them and those surrounding them and attempted to run them over.”

“That’s not what happened,” Tapper argued, later suggesting that his concern centered on whether Good had actually attacked the officers.

“It absolutely is what happened,” Noem countered. “[She] blocked the road for a long time and was yelling at them and impeding a federal law enforcement operation.”

Video from several angles captured the confrontation between Ross and Good that Wednesday. Good, a mother of three, had parked her vehicle in the roadway, preventing the officers from moving forward for more than three minutes.

When officers exited their vehicle to address the situation, Ross was positioned in front of Good’s car when she suddenly accelerated.

Ross jumped aside and fired a round into the windshield, then appeared to fire two additional shots into the side of the SUV.

Noem said Ross was later treated at a nearby hospital after being “hit by the vehicle” and was subsequently released.

Tapper questioned why Noem was convinced that Good was not “trying to move her car and flee and get away,” rather than intentionally striking Ross.

“The facts of the situation are that the vehicle was weaponized, and it attacked the law enforcement officer,” Noem said. “He defended himself, and he defended those individuals around him.”

“When there is something that is weaponized to use against the public and law enforcement, that is an act of domestic terrorism,” she added. “You don’t get to change the facts just because you don’t like them.”

Senior Trump administration officials, including Vice President JD Vance, have forcefully defended Ross amid widespread criticism.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has confirmed that it is investigating the shooting.

“You see how quickly the situation unfolded, how the officer was in front of the vehicle when she sped off,” Noem told Tapper. “How she ran into him. And how he had to take quick action based on his training to defend himself and his colleagues.

“That’s very clear and factual from the videos that you can see, it’s nobody’s interpretation.”

Tapper later attempted to challenge Noem by airing footage of Capitol Police officers being assaulted during the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot, noting that those involved were later pardoned by President Donald Trump.

Noem dismissed the comparison, saying that “every single one of these investigations comes in the full context of the situation on the ground.”

She also criticized statements from Minnesota officials, singling out Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey for calling on ICE to “get ….out of” the city.

“They’ve extremely politicized and inappropriately talked about the situation on the ground in their city. They’ve inflamed the public, they’ve encouraged the kind of destruction and violence that we’ve seen in Minneapolis in the last several days,” Noem said of local leaders.

“I would encourage them to grow up.”

WATCH:


{Matzav.com}

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