Fox News 2025-01-09 00:08:21


Garland intends to release Special Counsel Jack Smith report on Trump election case

Attorney General Merrick Garland will release Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report on the 2020 election interference case against President-elect Trump, according to a court filing.

The Department of Justice told the 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals Wednesday that Garland intends to release Volume One of Smith’s report to Congress, which covers the allegations that Trump attempted to illegally undo the results of the 2020 presidential election.

However, Garland will not release Volume Two, which covers the classified documents case against Trump, as two defendants in that case still face criminal proceedings. 

Biden makes a startling admission about his age and health

President Biden acknowledged concerns about his age and discussed his legacy in an interview with USA Today in the Oval Office, still claiming he would have won another term if he’d run against Donald Trump but admitting he’s not sure if he could have lasted four more years.

“Do you think you would’ve had the vigor to serve another four years in office?” USA Today’s Susan Page asked.

“I don’t know,” Biden said. “That’s why I thought when I first announced, talking to Barack [Obama] about it, I said I thought I was the person. I had no intention of running after [my son] Beau died – for real, not a joke. And then when Trump was running again for re-election, I really thought I had the best chance of beating him.”

“But I also wasn’t looking to be president when I was 85 years old, 86 years old. And so I did talk about passing the baton,” Biden added, reflecting on concerns over his age, especially before he dropped out of the presidential race. 

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Multiple media reports, including from the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, have included interviews with current and former White House staffers who expressed serious doubts over the 82-year-old Biden’s stamina. 

“But I don’t know,” the president went on. “Who the hell knows? So far, so good. But who knows what I’m going to be when I’m 86 years old?”

The president’s words appeared to be a stark admission that despite his repeated claims before dropping out that he was in great shape, he realized his own limits as the oldest president in American history. 

Biden again said he believed he could have beaten Trump in a rematch. The president announced that he was leaving the race following his shaky debate performance against him in June that laid bare the cognitive issues that many of his supporters had denied or shielded. He ultimately endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, who went on to lose the general election.

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Biden’s comments were in the context of a discussion about his legacy as president. 

“And so I hope that history says that I came in and I had a plan how to restore the economy and reestablish America’s leadership in the world,” the president said. “That was my hope.”

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Biden argued that an advantage of his age is his experience with world leaders and with historical changes in different regions of the world. 

“And I think the only advantage of being an old guy is that I’ve known every major world leader for a long time,” Biden said. 

“And so I had a perspective on each of them and their interests,” he continued. “And so I think it helped me navigate some of the fundamental changes taking place, whether it’s in Europe, in Latin America, in the Middle East, in the Far East. And anyway, that’s what I hope anyway, that I’m viewed in that context.”

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How Democratic Governor Newsom’s decision could lead to heartbreak for parents

The parents of a 13-year-old girl who was run over by a suicidal driver in Malibu in 2010 are appealing to California Gov. Gavin Newsom to stop the felon from being released after a parole board approved his suitability to be released. 

Michel and Ellen Shane lost their daughter, Emily, in 2010 when Sina Khankhanian went on a maniacal 17-mile drive along the Pacific Coast Highway (PCH), wildly weaving between vehicles at high speed before eventually plowing into Emily and killing her.

Emily, described by her parents as a carefree, fun-loving teen who enjoyed sports and dancing, was returning from a sleepover at a friend’s house and had been walking on the side of the road to her usual pickup spot to meet her father when Khankhanian ultimately took her life.

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Khankhanian, now 41, was found guilty of second-degree murder and sentenced to 15 years to life in prison in 2012. He said he was upset and had suicidal thoughts over losing his job days earlier, while his attorney at the time also argued that Khankhanian did not fully comprehend what his actions could lead to that day due to his autism.

He was granted parole by a parole board in June 2023, but that decision was reversed by Newsom in October 2023. 

In October 2024, the board again approved Khankhanian’s parole and release, but Newsom has so far not intervened, meaning the prisoner is on the verge of becoming a free man, much to the ire and frustration of the Shanes.

“The only person that has a decision is Gov. Newsom or the team that reviews all of these [paroles] and makes a recommendation to him,” Michel told Fox News Digital.

The couple say Khankhanian remains a danger to society and is unrepentant for killing their daughter.

Michel recollected that fateful day and said that Khankhanian, who was driving a 2008 Mitsubishi Lancer, actually tore past him moments before he hit Emily. 

“While I was sitting at the light waiting to turn, I saw this guy driving, and he was in a Mitsubishi, and he was breaking lanes, driving into traffic, going on the shoulder, like, 75, 80 miles an hour, and I’m sitting there going, ‘Oh man, is this going to ever end badly. This looks terrible,’ and never thinking that we would be the victim,” Michel said. 

When Michel arrived at the pickup spot to collect Emily, there was no sign of her, and after frantic calls to his wife, they soon realized that Emily had been involved in the incident. 

“He hit Emily. He threw her 30 feet in the air, and she fell,” Ellen said. “She actually hit a sign first and then she fell. His car went up an embankment, flipped, and it came out without a scratch.”

“We found out that this man… had left his home in a trailer park… and had driven for over 17 miles like a maniac. We also found out he had written a suicide note before he left.”

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Ellen said one of the most difficult parts of the tragedy was listening to the fire chief’s testimony in court where he revealed his conversation with Khankhanian shortly after Emily was pronounced dead at the scene inside an ambulance.

“He said, and these are his exact words, ‘I don’t give a f—.’ That’s what he said, and then he said, ‘That b—- deserved to die,’” Ellen said, quoting the fire chief. 

An eyewitness who arrived on the scene and asked Khankhanian to get out before his car exploded, said Khankhanian responded to her by saying, “F— you. Leave me alone. F— off. I want to die. Just leave me alone,” according to court documents. The eyewitness said she found Emily on the ground, around 30 to 40 feet from Khankhanian’s car.  

Ellen said she is a forgiving person and if Khankhanian had said it was an accident and begged for forgiveness, then she would have found it in her heart to do so.

“I would, as hard as that is, with the most significant loss, the worst loss that a person could have of losing their child, but this was not the case,” Ellen said. “This was a man who intentionally hit a young child walking, and he was utterly remorseless. Utterly.”

According to court documents, Khankhanian told investigators he had four glasses of wine and took pills belonging to his fiancée before he got behind the wheel. He had been fired from his veterinary clinic job two days earlier due to his “erratic” behavior and left a suicide note next to his fiancée’s bed instructing her to tell his parents that he was “gone” and “will never return.”

Khankhanian’s former attorney, Bradley Brunon, argued at trial that his client’s autism prevented him from appreciating that his actions posed a risk of death for himself and others.

“His psychological conditions prevented him from thinking ahead to the likelier possible consequences of his reckless driving. That testimony was clearly established in the trial,” Brunon told Fox News Digital. 

He said Khankhanian did not intentionally set out to kill Emily and that he should instead have been charged with vehicular manslaughter, which carries up to 10 years in prison.

“It wasn’t intended, and he had no criminal record at all, so the time he has spent in custody is adequate punishment,” Brunon said.

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The couple says Khankhanian has been playing up his autism diagnosis to “game the system” for a release. Khankhanian was previously diagnosed with autism, Tourette’s syndrome and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

In court, Michel said Khankhanian was catatonic, acting as if he couldn’t understand proceedings, but in prison tape recordings with his girlfriend, the Shanes say he is perfectly normal while discussing the case. 

So this guy is capable of deceit and actually quite clever and being able to present himself in a way that to get a result that he wants,” Ellen said.

Khankhanian apologized to the Shane family just before he was sentenced in June 2012, saying he was “deeply sorry” for the pain and grief he had caused them. 

The Shanes say they do not believe it was sincere.

The couple want Khankhanian locked up for longer than his 15-year sentence but say even if Newsom does reverse the ruling, Khankhanian could reapply every year until he is ultimately released. That prospect means the Shanes will end up fighting against his release every year until he’s set free, reliving the tragedy every year before Christmas.

It’s brutal because … it’s not bringing Emily back from the dead and putting her back in our life,” Michel said. “So when this happens, it brings us back to 2010. It brings us back to [the] death of a 13-year-old. Even though we see her friends now, they’re 27, 28 years old, they’re young women. But in our mind, our child is stuck at 13, so it’s brutal because we literally have to relive it and then argue why should the man who killed a child be allowed out.”

“And honestly – and Ellen’s much more forgiving than I am – I [couldn’t] care less as far as I’m concerned, he could rot in jail. But if he should be let out, he shouldn’t be let out … as a 40-year-old having his whole young life available to him. Wait till he’s 60, wait till he’s 55 so that the majority of his youth is gone.”

Right now, they are hoping Newsom will act and are trying to raise awareness and hope others will write to the governor. The couple says they have received the support of other lawmakers such as state Sens. Ben Allen and Henry Stern, but so far they have not heard from Newsom on a possible parole reversal. 

Khankhanian received a proposed grant of suitability on Oct. 22 after a parole suitability hearing. Newsom’s office says that the decision is subject to a review by the board’s legal office. 

“If the board’s decision becomes final within 120 days after the date of the parole hearing, it is then subject to review by the governor,” a spokesperson for Newsom’s office tells Fox News Digital.

“The Governor’s Office has not received Khankhanian’s case again from the Board of Parole Hearings. If he does, it will be reviewed carefully.”

In his 2023 reversal of the parole, Newsom stated that the evidence showed Khankhanian posed “an unreasonable danger to society if released from prison.” Newsom wrote that Khankhanian made efforts to improve himself in prison by engaging in self-help programming, taking college courses and working as a teacher’s aide.

However, he noted that Khankhanian had “demonstrated inconsistent treatment compliance” over the last few years at the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility and State Prison in Corcoran, Kings County.

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They say he was off his medication at the time of the incident and therefore can’t be trusted to stay on the pills should he be released. 

Despite their ongoing grief, the Shanes have sought to make some good come out of their loss.

Michel, who was the executive producer for movies such as “Catch Me If You Can” and “I, Robot,” has become a road safety advocate and made his own documentary to shine a light on the notoriously treacherous 21-mile strip of the PCH – much of which has no sidewalks for pedestrians or lacks substantial embankment – and he is developing a mobile app game to teach young people about driving. 

There were 537 crashes resulting in 779 injuries and 23 fatalities from 2018 through 2023, according to California Department of Transportation data. In 2023, four Pepperdine University students were fatally struck on the PCH as they walked to an event, and their deaths are discussed in the documentary. 

The couple also sought to remember Emily by creating a nonprofit in her name, the Emily Shane Foundation, which provides personalized academic learning and mentoring to middle school students with learning difficulties. 

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Ellen said Emily had mild learning difficulties, too, and the initiative is a way of honoring her memory. So far, the nonprofit has helped more than 1,100 students in 14 schools across Los Angeles, and the couple says they are always looking for donations to help fund the program. 

“It’s interesting how a tragedy, probably the worst tragedy, has changed the entire trajectory of my life,” Ellen said, adding that it’s become her “life’s passion.”

“I cannot tell you how incredibly rewarding it is to see these children … be instilled with confidence and motivation, realize that there are no limits to achieving their goals and dreams. That, to me, is so rewarding and significant and a beautiful testimony to Emily. So, it’s interesting how things unfold in life.”

Mexico completely disperses migrant caravans heading to US after Trump’s latest threat

The Mexican government is working hard to break up migrant caravans trying to make the treacherous journey north to the U.S. ahead of President-elect Trump’s inauguration in less than two weeks’ time.

Faced with the prospect of massive tariffs on goods under the new administration, Mexico has been dispersing migrants throughout the country to keep them far from the U.S. border, including dropping them off at the once vibrant tourist hotspot of Acapulco, a beach resort town on Mexico’s Pacific coast made famous by the jet set in the 1950s and ’60s.

Once a crown jewel of Mexico’s tourism industry, the city now suffers under the thumb of organized crime and is still struggling to climb back after taking a direct hit from powerful Hurricane Otis in 2023. It now has one of Mexico’s highest rates of homicides.

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Yet authorities are dropping busloads of migrants there with little support and few options. 

The Mexican government has embraced a policy of “dispersion and exhaustion” to reduce the number of migrants reaching the U.S. border. Authorities let migrants walk for days until they’re exhausted and then offer to bus them to various cities where they say their immigration status will be reviewed.

The migrants tell the Associated Press that they accepted an offer from immigration officials to come to the city under the premise that they could continue their journey north toward the U.S. border, but instead they have essentially been abandoned there. 

On Monday, desperate migrants could be seen sleeping in the streets in tents and say they fear Mexico’s drug cartels could target them for kidnapping and extortion, though many migrants say authorities extort them too.

“Immigration (officials) told us they were going to give us a permit to transit the country freely for 10, 15 days and it wasn’t like that,” 28-year-old Venezuelan, Ender Antonio Castañeda, told the Associated Press. “They left us dumped here without any way to get out. They won’t sell us (bus) tickets. They won’t sell us anything.”

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Castañeda, is one of thousands of other migrants who had left the southern city of Tapachula near the Guatemalan border in recent weeks in the hope of crossing the Mexican border into the U.S. before Trump takes office.

It would take an adult migrant about 16 days of non-stop walking to get to the most southern point of the U.S. border is at the crossing at Matamoros, near Brownsville, Texas. Migrants prefer traveling in caravans because they believe there is safety in numbers as it is hard or impossible for immigration agents to detain large groups of hundreds of migrants.

Trump has threatened Mexico with a 25% tariff on imported goods from Mexico, and the country hopes the lower numbers will give them some defense from Trump’s pressures.

Trump is expected to clamp down heavily on illegal crossings, which have soared under the Biden-Harris administration. He has also vowed to carry out the largest deportation operation in the history of the U.S. and has appointed hardliner South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem to serve as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) while Tom Homan will be the new “Border Czar.” 

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Additionally, he has also pledged to end the use of parole programs by the Biden administration that allow migrants to enter via the expanded “lawful pathways.”

On Tuesday, Trump reiterated his threat in a press briefing where he also said he would change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.

“Mexico has to stop allowing millions of people to pour into our country. They can stop them. And we’re going to put very serious tariffs on Mexico and Canada, because Canada, they come through Canada too, and the drugs that are coming through are at record numbers, record numbers. So we’re going to make up for that by putting tariffs on Mexico and Canada, substantial tariffs,” he said. 

Activewear brand founder has fiery response to transphobia accusations

Jennifer Sey, the founder of an activewear company defending women’s sports, reacted to a recent critical piece from a liberal news outlet by stating the word “transphobic” means “nothing” to her.

Amid the ongoing controversy about biological males participating in women’s sports, San Francisco Chronicle columnist and cultural critic Soleil Ho wrote an opinion piece lamenting the rise of so-called “anti-trans activewear.” The article, headlined, “Is this the next MAGA hat? Transphobic apparel is the new hotness,” cited T-shirts reading “Save Girls’ Sports” and “It’s Common Sense. XX ≠ XY.”

Sey, a former US Gymnastics Champion and women’s athlete advocate who founded XX-XY Athletics, was slammed in the article for owning “a company whose sole purpose is to pump out anti-trans activewear and fund right-wing influencers.”

Sey originally responded to Ho’s piece by writing an X post joking, “This article wins for the dumbest thing I’ve read this year so far.” She told Fox News Digital about her work with XX-XY Athletics, touting it as “the only brand standing up for the protection of women’s sports and spaces.”

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“I was inspired to start XX-XY Athletics because I looked around at all of the athletic brands out there claiming to champion female athletes and ignoring this issue that is right in front of us, which is more and more males entering women’s sports,” Sey said. “Not only ignoring it, but I would argue, in many instances, standing on the wrong side of the issue.”

She also cited how, as a longtime San Francisco resident, she emerged as a major critic of the area’s local policies starting in 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic, sparking controversy that has not endeared her to local liberal media.

“The San Francisco Chronicle likes to troll me a bit. They don’t like that I’m so critical of the city and their institutions and their governance,” she recalled. “That said, I’ll take it, you know, if XX-XY athletics is the ‘new hotness,’ that sounds like it’s pretty on-trend to me.”

Fox News Digital reached out to Ho for comment.

She went on to address the recent article criticizing her directly.

“The article overall is … I don’t have another word for it other than ‘stupid’ and ‘filled with lies,’” she said. “The writer makes the assertion that vast numbers of studies show that sex is a spectrum. That’s just false. There are no studies. She cites no studies. She links to no studies. There is no evidence that sex is a spectrum. Sex is binary. I don’t know how a newspaper can not even fact check. I know it’s an op-ed, but you know, basic facts should not be violated, I think, in an actual newspaper.”

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Even so, she said, she will gladly accept the publicity to boost her business, “and the fact is, it’s good for truth.”

Sey also locked horns with the writer’s ideology specifically.

“It’s an ideological perspective, it’s activism, it’s not biological reality,” Sey said, deriding the idea that “’a person is what they say they are.’”

“That’s just not true,” Sey replied. “There is such a thing as biological reality.”

She was amused at the comparison to the distinct red “MAGA hats” of Trump supporters.

“Well, MAGA hats are pretty popular,” she said. “I think people wear them to make a statement about their values and where they stand on the political issues of the day. You know, I believe XX-XY Athletics is an assertion of just basic truth, biological truth, and I think it’s becoming the uniform of common sense and more and more people don’t care that they’re called ‘transphobes’ for wearing the shirt or ‘bigots’ for wearing the shirt, because they know that that name-calling is the purview of those with no argument.”

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Her roots in calling out the invasion of women’s spaces go deep. 

“I was the first former elite gymnast to speak out on the abuses in the sport, the emotional, physical, and sexual abuse in the sport,” she recalled. “So I care deeply about protecting female athletes, and I think this an important issue within that same category. Female athletes deserve to train safely, and they deserve privacy, they deserve fairness, and I can’t believe that anyone who calls themselves a feminist or a defender of women’s rights would not see the issue here is not grounded in biological reality, and I won’t further a lie.”

Musk, Ramaswamy unveil DOGE full-time, salaried roles they’re trying to fill

It turns out that some of the inaugural Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) positions won’t be volunteer-based after all.

On its X account Monday, DOGE announced it is currently recruiting a “very small number” of full-time salaried software and info security engineers. The account also posted on Dec. 27 that it plans to hire for full-time human resources, IT and finance positions.

“If interested, please DM us a few bullet points demonstrating exceptional ability, and your cell phone number,” the post reads.

For the HR, IT and finance applicants, they’re asked to send the DOGE X account their resume and “why you are interested in DOGE.”

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The newly created Department of Government Efficiency is preparing to roll out once the Trump administration is sworn in with the stated goal of slashing government waste and providing increased transparency when it comes to government spending.

DOGE is not a Cabinet-level department but rather a blue-ribbon committee outside of the government that will be tasked with examining issues of government spending, waste, efficiency and operations.

Proponents of DOGE, headed by Tesla and Space X CEO Elon Musk and tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, have suggested that $2 trillion in government waste can be cut from the federal budget through the reduction of spending, eliminating government programs and trimming the federal workforce.

In a FOX Business interview on “Varney & Co.” last month, Musk’s mother, Maye Musk, clarified that the co-chairs themselves will not be paid for their government-related work.

“[Elon and Ramaswamy] also want to share their expertise with [Trump], and they’re volunteering, they don’t need an income,” Maye told Stuart Varney. “They’re just volunteering to help in certain areas where they’re in expertise. And I just glow when I hear all that.”

“And everybody’s volunteering,” Maye had added on DOGE’s workforce, “to help [Elon] and Vivek.”

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Some of the spending cut proposals by Musk and Ramaswamy include simplifying the U.S. tax code, auditing the Pentagon, ending federal employees’ remote work, reevaluating expired congressional programs, modernizing IT systems and protecting federal health care and Social Security benefits – to name a few.

For now, DOGE is operating out of glass-walled office space in Washington leased by SpaceX, another Musk-owned company, about four blocks away from the White House.

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Say goodbye to two Girl Scout cookies: ‘Something new and delicious’

This year will be the last time two Girl Scout cookie varieties will be sold, Girl Scouts of the USA announced in a news release on Tuesday.

This week also marks the kickoff of the scouting organization’s annual “cookie season.” 

“The 2025 cookie lineup is jam-packed with the full spread of highly sought-after cookie flavors, including Thin Mints, Samoas/Caramel deLites, Peanut Butter Patties/Tagalongs and more,” according to the news release. 

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At the end of the season, however, two flavors will be retired, the Girl Scouts announced: Girl Scout S’mores and Toast-Yay!

A spokesperson from Girl Scouts of the USA told Fox News Digital that the lineup change was nothing out of the ordinary.

“We routinely reevaluate our cookie lineup to make room for new innovations. Discontinuing Toast-Yay! and Girl Scout S’mores may lead to something new and delicious,” the spokesperson said. 

Girl Scout S’mores cookies were introduced during the 2017 Girl Scout cookie season. Toast-Yay! cookies were offered for the first time in 2021. 

No new cookie varieties were added for the 2025 Girl Scout cookie season, which typically lasts until April. 

“We routinely reevaluate our cookie lineup to make room for new innovations.”

“Girl Scout cookie season is about so much more than selling the iconic cookies people know and love,” Wendy Lou, Girl Scouts of the USA chief revenue officer, said in the news release. 

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The money earned from cookie sales “directly power girls’ journeys in leadership, entrepreneurship and community building,” Lou also said. “The sweet success of each sale is a testament to how much girls can change the world when they put their minds to it.”

The current setup of Girl Scout cookie sales is a far cry from its origins over a century ago. 

The first Girl Scout cookies “were originally home-baked by girl members with moms volunteering as technical advisers,” according to the Girl Scouts website. 

The first recorded sales of cookies to fund troop activities was in 1917, five years after the Girl Scouts were established in the United States.

The following decade, Girl Scout cookie sales expanded across the country.

“In July 1922, The American Girl magazine, published by Girl Scouts of the USA, featured an article by Florence E. Neil, a local director in Chicago, Illinois, including a cookie recipe that had been given to the council’s 2,000 Girl Scouts,” the Girl Scouts website said. 

Neil suggested selling the cookies for 25 cents to 30 cents per dozen. 

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Today, cookies can be purchased online or through a local in-person sale, with boxes costing up to $6 in some parts of the country. 

Cookies are made by two bakeries – ABC Bakers and Little Brownie Bakers – which account for different names for the same cookie. 

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Each individual Girl Scout council decides when cookies will be on sale, as well as the price per box, the website said.