Fox News 2025-06-11 10:15:37


ICE workplace raid in red state met by angry rock-throwing protesters

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After a workplace ICE raid that resulted in the arrests of about 70 alleged illegal aliens at a meatpacking plant in Omaha, several protesters threw rocks and jumped on federal vehicles carrying out the operation.

The AP reported that federal immigration authorities made the arrests at Glenn Valley Foods Tuesday morning.

Fox News Digital reached out to ICE to confirm the raid but did not immediately hear back.

ICE officials told the AP the raid was “based on an ongoing criminal investigation into the large-scale employment of aliens without authorization to work in the United States” and that it was likely the largest “worksite enforcement operation” in Nebraska since President Donald Trump took office.

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The Flatwater Free Press reported that the situation grew tense after protesters began gathering as a caravan of federal vehicles was leaving the plant. The outlet reported that several protesters jumped on moving law enforcement vehicles and “threw rocks and debris at the cars, shattering one window.”

Video posted by the outlet shows what appears to be a line of federal vehicles surrounded by protesters on either side throwing objects, kicking the cars and yelling profanity and slogans like “f— you, pig.”

At one point during the video, a window can be heard smashing. In another video posted by the outlet, two protesters jumped on the hood of a vehicle as it attempts to travel off.

Violence erupted in Omaha with Los Angeles still battling violent anti-ICE riots and the rest of the country facing widespread protests against the Trump administration ramping up of ICE arrests and deportations.

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Protests over the raids in Los Angeles devolved into violence over the weekend as rioters targeted federal law enforcement officials by throwing rocks, and videos showed people looting stores, setting cars on fire and taking over a freeway. 

Trump announced Saturday he was deploying 2,000 National Guard members to help quell the violence, bypassing the governor, who typically activates the National Guard. The administration has also deployed several hundred active-duty Marines to respond to the riots.

The move prompted Newsom to file a lawsuit against the Trump administration over efforts to allegedly “federalize the California National Guard,” while Democrats across the nation have attempted to pin blame for the violence on Trump’s activation of the National Guard while characterizing the anti-ICE riots as “peaceful” demonstrations. 

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Speaking with reporters in the Oval Office Tuesday, Trump said Americans can expect additional immigration raids across the country similar to those in California, warning that any potential riots that break out in response to the raids will be met with “equal or greater force” compared to the government’s handling of recent Los Angeles violence.

Democratic lawmaker faces prison after allegedly attacking federal agents at protest

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Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-NJ) was hit with a federal indictment for allegedly obstructing Homeland Security agents during the May 9 incident outside a Newark immigration detention facility in a move her attorneys call political payback.

U.S. Attorney Alina Habba announced the three-count indictment, charging McIver with forcibly impeding federal officers during the attempted arrest of Newark Mayor Ras Baraka at the Delaney Hall immigration facility.

According to a DOJ press release, McIver and two other members of Congress were conducting a congressional oversight visit that coincided with an immigration protest. After Baraka entered the facility’s secured area, federal agents warned him to leave.

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When officers tried to arrest him, McIver allegedly blocked them, putting her arms around the mayor, and “slammed her forearm” into one officer while grabbing another.

Each of the first two counts carries a maximum eight-year prison sentence. The third carries up to one year.

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In a statement on X, Habba said: “While people are free to express their views… they must not do so in a manner that endangers law enforcement.”

McIver’s attorney, Paul Fishman, dismissed the case as political in a statement given to Fox News:

“This prosecution is political retaliation against a dedicated public servant… We fully expect the Congresswoman’s exoneration.”

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The preliminary hearing scheduled for Wednesday was canceled. An arraignment is expected within two weeks.

Former champion slams USA Gymnastics for ‘cowardice’ on trans athlete policy

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USA Gymnastics is under the national microscope after its biggest star, Simone Biles, ignited mass backlash for attacking Riley Gaines over the issue of trans athletes in women’s sports. Biles has since apologized for her remarks against Gaines, but the impact of public perception to her and the organization is only just setting in. 

Former Team USA and NCAA champion women’s gymnast Dee Worley, spoke out against USA Gymnastics after it was revealed that the organization’s webpages outlining its transgender athlete policy and resources were offline, Fox News Digital previously reported

Worley, a former USA Gymnastics athlete and board member, revealed in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital her thoughts on the state of leadership for the nation’s governing gymnastics body, as the U.S. is set to host the next Summer Olympics in Los Angeles in 2028. 

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“I think there’s been a steady decline in its ability to have backbone and its leaders’ ability to have backbone for some time now,” Worley said of the organization and its recent quiet distancing from trans inclusion policies. “When you don’t have principles that you are willing to be dyed in the wool about and be ten toes down about, then you are going to blow with every wind.”

Worley, who competed for the U.S. national team as early as high school in the late 1980s, made history at the University of Alabama as a 17-time All-American, a four-time champion and a nine-time regional champion. As a senior in 1993, she set an NCAA record with perfect 10’s in five consecutive meets. She later says she served as a USA gymnastics board member. 

Now, Worley is a women’s sports rights advocate and a member of the Independent Counil on Women’s Sports (ICONS) network. 

And she went so far as to say the organization is exhibiting “cowardice,” with its past stance and currently unclear stance on the issue now. 

“I don’t like their cowardice in any instance. Whether it means they have the trans information up in the first place or they took it down when it got hot in the kitchen. I don’t admire cowardice and I think you know find your position stand on it, but be ready for the fight if you are standing on an issue that is going to be at the detriment of women in your sport who have made your sport what it is,” Worley said. 

Previous links to three of the organization’s pages outlining its transgender eligibility policies are currently offline. When the pages were officially taken offline is currently unknown. 

One link previously led to a November 2020 announcement that the organization no longer required trans athletes to undergo sex reassignment, legal gender recognition, and hormone therapy in order to compete in the gender category of their choosing, as seen in an archive by the Wayback Machine. That page still shows up in search results, but the link now goes to a 404 error page. 

Another link previously went to a three-page PDF pamphlet of USA Gymnastics guidelines for transgender and non-binary athletes, as seen in a Wayback Machine archive. That link is now inaccessible, but is still a top result on search engines. 

Another link previously went to a nine-page PDF USA Gymnastics pamphlet titled “Transgender Athlete Inclusion Resources: Supporting Transgender and Non-Binary Athletes,” as seen in a Wayback Machine archive. That link is also no longer accessible. 

Worley predicts that the organization will announce an official amendment to its policy, but not one that goes far enough as she’d like. 

“I predict they will amend the language leaving lots of loopholes and flexibility for them to be just nebulous enough for them to change their minds if and when the time comes,” Worley said.

“I think they are very pressure driven an externally focus driven instead of being principle driven. So you cannot depend on any organization that does not stand on anything or have actual values that they refused to bend on.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to USA Gymnastics for comment. 

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For Worley, the organization’s recent stance in letting biological males compete in the women’s category represents a leftward political shift by the organization in recent years. She believes it began in after the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

“When I was a part of USA Gymnastics it was really rigid… USA Gymnastics was really about being team USA. It was about representing the United States well,” Worley said of when she competed in the 90s and early 2000s. 

“So that’s my recollection of it and it has gone way left now. In my opinion, USA Gymnastics has been absolutely plaqued by incredibly faulty leadership for many, many years and has also bent its knee to the woke mob. Which is unfortunate because it has nothing to do with gymnastics.” 

Worley recalls a shift by the organization de-prioritizing the protection of athletes after the public treatment of Gabby Douglas at the 2008 summer games. 

“I did notice that and that was kind of the tipping point for me, I noticed some type of fall off in terms of the protection of the athletes,” Worley said. 

Other major Team USA sport governing bodies have quietly amended their transgender policies amid rising opposition to trans inclusion in women’s and girls’ sports. 

USA Track and Field (USATF) official transgender eligibility policy now references the World Athletics guidelines on its official webpage. 

USATF previously referenced the International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s policy, as seen in an archive via Wayback Machine

The IOC allows biological males to compete in the women’s category, while World Athletics bans any athlete who has undergone male puberty from competing as a woman.

USA Fencing announced in April that it is preparing to change its gender-eligibility policy, after a viral protest by women’s fencer Stephanie Turner sparked mass backlash and federal intervention by protesting a trans opponent. 

The organization said it is preparing to amend its current policies that allow biological males to compete with women and girls in the event that it is “forced” to change it. 

“In the event that USA Fencing is forced to change its current stance in accordance with oversight bodies or federal legislation, the new policy states athletes competing in USA Fencing-sanctioned tournaments must compete according to their biological sex,” the announcement read. 

The proposed updated policy ensures that the women’s category “will be open exclusively to athletes of the female sex.” The men’s category “will be open to all other athletes who are otherwise eligible for competition.”

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Worley hopes that the next generation of gymnasts can help contribute to substantial change in their governing body. 

“If any female gymnasts are in a position where there is a male competitor who is claiming to be a female and wanting to compete against females, I would say to them ‘push back,’” Worley said.  

“One don’t compete if you opt out there is no one for them to compete against. Two really put pressure on the governing body who is supposed to have your back. Supposed to be supporting you of your progression in the sport. Don’t let them get away with checking the woke mob box and doing whatever they think they should be doing for optics for a very small percentage of the population at the sacrifice and compromise of your career.” 

Austin Metcalf and Karmelo Anthony deadly confrontation caught on school video

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Amid an ongoing investigation over the fatal stabbing of high school student Austin Metcalf at a Frisco, Texas, track meet, the school district announced it has surveillance footage of the stabbing.

The Frisco Independent School District confirmed to Fox News Digital that it possesses surveillance footage of the April 2 incident at Kuykendall Stadium but will not be publicly releasing the video.

The fatal altercation between 17-year-old Metcalf of Memorial High School and allegedly 17-year-old Karmelo Anthony, a student at Frisco Centennial High School, unfolded during a rain delay on April 2 at the district track and field championship.

Anthony is facing first-degree murder charges.

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Authorities say that Anthony fatally stabbed Metcalf in the chest. Though the two students reportedly had no prior relationship, a brief altercation escalated quickly. 

An arrest report obtained by Fox News sheds new light on the pre-stabbing clash after Metcalf reportedly told Anthony that he needed to move out of the Memorial team’s tent, a witness told Frisco police. The report noted that Anthony “grabbed his bag, opened it and reached inside it” and said, “Touch me and see what happens.”

“Austin stood up and pushed the male to get him out of the tent,” the arrest report said.

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The witness told police that Anthony then “reached into his bag and the male took a knife out of the bag and stabbed Austin,” per the report. The witness then told the officer that Anthony left the scene after the stabbing. Metcalf, 17, died in his twin brother’s arms.

Anthony was arrested at the scene and has since been charged with first-degree murder. He and his supporters say he acted in self-defense and that Metcalf pushed him out of the tent.

His bond has since dropped from $1 million to $250,000. His bond conditions include house arrest and an ankle monitor, and he will only be able to leave his home with the judge’s permission.

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Social media rips Simone Biles’ apology to Riley Gaines as PR statement

The Internet does not believe Simone Biles wrote her “apology” tweet to Riley Gaines, which has quickly made its way around the sports and political world.

Currently, there are more than 9,000 tweets all using the phrase “Your PR,” on X. 

As someone who lives on social media and covers trending topics, let me tell you this: The fact that so many people immediately concluded that Biles’ statement was something out of a public relations manual is honestly wild. 

However, it’s easy to think that after reading Biles statement…I mean apology. (Note, Riley did accept Simone’s “apology.”)

On Tuesday morning, Biles responded to former All-American swimmer and OutKick’s very own Riley Gaines over a debate regarding transgender athletes. In her original tweet on Friday, which Simone even retweeted later for emphasis, the seven-time Olympic gold medalist called Gaines “truly sick” and even insinuated that the swimmer looked like a man.

Biles’ tweet soon went super-viral and became a topic on political and sports talk shows, including Stephen A. Smith, who had Riley Gaines on as a guest on his podcast on Tuesday.

“The current system doesn’t adequately balance these important principles, which often leads to frustration and heated exchanges, and it didn’t help for me to get personal with Riley, which I apologize for,” Biles wrote on Tuesday. 

However, the backlash is now coming at Biles for taking four days to issue her response, which some believe reads a bit suspect.

“The people you upset originally see through your PR team, AI created, half-arsed apology. Nobody believes it, and it was clear that you don’t believe what you were originally saying either,” one person tweeted before also adding that “the people who cheered you on now think you’re a massive bigot.” Welcome to 2025, everyone!

“When you have to hire a PR team to write your tweets, you’ve lost!” another wrote.

“Took your PR team long enough to come up with this.”

“Your PR tweet ain’t gon’ cut it” reads another one among the countless others.

In addition to accepting Biles’ apology, Gaines also explained more about why she believes she is advocating for women’s rights in sports.

Riley’s response didn’t take four days.

It took less than one hour.

Rare cancer triples among millennials as doctors warn of ‘alarming rates’ in research

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A rare type of cancer is growing among millennials and members of Generation X, new research shows.

Diagnoses of appendix cancer have tripled in the U.S. for people born between 1976 and 1984 — and it has quadrupled for those born between 1981 and 1989.

The study was published on Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

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Researchers from the Vanderbilt University Medical Center analyzed data from the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) Program to arrive at these findings.

“When you take these alarming rates that we are seeing for appendiceal cancer across generations, together with the fact that one in every three patients diagnosed with appendiceal cancer is diagnosed under the age of 50, these point to a timely need for everyone to be aware of the signs and symptoms of appendix cancer,” said lead author Andreana Holowatyj, PhD, assistant professor of Medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, in a press release from the university.

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Cancer of the appendix is rare, affecting only about one or two people per million each year in the U.S., according to the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Even so, doctors emphasize the importance of seeking medical attention if symptoms emerge. 

“Ruling out the possibility of an appendix cancer diagnosis, or diagnosing it early, is important for this cancer as we continue to learn what factors may be contributing to this worrisome trend,” Holowatyj said.

Appendiceal cancer forms in the appendix, which is a small organ located in the lower right abdomen.

There are two main types: epithelial appendiceal cancer, which involves the cells of the lining of the appendix, and neuroendocrine appendiceal cancer, which results from the growth of neuroendocrine (carcinoid) tumors of the appendix, the NCI states.

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In early stages of the disease, most people do not notice symptoms.

As the cancer progresses, common symptoms include pain, a bloated feeling, a mass in the abdomen, nausea and vomiting, and sudden feelings of fullness while eating, according to the above source.

Five-year survival rates for appendix cancer range from 10% to 63%.

Common treatments for this type of cancer include surgery to remove the appendix and any other affected organs, as well as chemotherapy to kill any metastasized cancer cells.

Based on the study findings, the researchers are calling for increased awareness among both the public and the medical community.

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“As incidence rates in younger generations are often indicative of future disease burden, these results support the need for histology-specific investigations of appendiceal adenocarcinoma, as well as increased education and awareness of appendiceal adenocarcinomas among healthcare providers and the public,” the study stated. 

There are no standard screening guidelines or risk factors for appendix cancer, which means up to half of diagnoses occur after the disease has already spread, according to the researchers.

Five-year survival rates for appendix cancer range from 10% to 63%.

The new study received funding from the Appendix Cancer Pseudomyxoma Peritonei (ACPMP) Research Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

Trump shares call screenshot after Gov Newsom denies contact over LA riots

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President Donald Trump hit back at Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s claims that the president did not recently call him, telling Fox News he spoke to the governor for about 16 minutes on Saturday. 

Trump told Fox News Tuesday while traveling to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, that Newsom did not pick up his first call over the weekend, but that he picked up the second call and the pair spoke for about 16 minutes on Saturday. 

“I told him to, essentially, ‘Get his ass in gear,’ and stop the riots, which were out of control,” Trump said Tuesday. “More than anything else, this shows what a liar he is – said I never called.” 

Trump provided a screenshot of the phone call dated June 7 at 1:23 a.m. 

White House director of communications Steven Cheung added in comment to Fox Digital Tuesday afternoon: “The President called Gavin Newsom to tell him to get his ass in gear. The Governor has clearly decided to disgustingly side with the violent rioters instead of protecting Californians. The only liar here is Newsom who continues to fail his state as he prioritizes doing interviews with leftist media to gaslight the public instead of helping his state.” 

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Earlier Tuesday, Trump held an event addressing wildfire response and prevention from the Oval Office, where he fielded a handful of questions from the media regarding the ongoing anti-ICE riots in Los Angles, telling a reporter he spoke to Newsome “a day ago.”

“A day ago. I called him up to tell him (he’s) got to do a better job. He’s done a bad job,” Trump said. 

In a response post on X, Newsom claimed Trump did not call him or leave a voicemail in the past day. 

“There was no call. Not even a voicemail. Americans should be alarmed that a President deploying Marines onto our streets doesn’t even know who he’s talking to,” Newsom posted to X Tuesday afternoon, accompanied by video of Trump in the Oval Office. 

“This call is from 3 days ago,” the governor’s press office added on X following the White House’s pushback on Newsom’s claim that Trump did not call

Newsom’s office added in an email to Fox News Digital Tuesday that: “The Governor’s comment is clearly in regards to the President’s comment this morning of ‘a day ago,’” adding that Newsom had already confirmed his Saturday phone call in a media interview on Sunday. 

Newsom spokesperson Izzy Gardon added in a comment to the Sacramento Bee Tuesday: “I just personally looked through the governor’s phone. No missed call. No voicemail. Nothing. The last time they spoke was Friday when the governor called him.”

WATCH: DEM, MEDIA OUTLETS INSIST LA ANTI-ICE RIOTS ARE ‘PEACEFUL’ DESPITE VIOLENCE, INJURED COPS

Los Angeles descended into violent riots Friday when federal immigration officials converged on the city to carry out raids targeting illegal immigrants. Local leaders such as Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Newsom, however, quickly denounced the raids in public statements while offering words of support for illegal immigrants in the state. 

Protests over the raids soon devolved into violence as rioters targeted and launched attacks on federal law enforcement officials. 

Trump announced Saturday that he was deploying 2,000 National Guard troops to help quell the violence. The Trump administration also deployed hundreds of U.S. Marines to respond to anti-immigration chaos on Monday evening as the violence continued. 

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“If I didn’t ‘SEND IN THE TROOPS’ to Los Angeles the last three nights, that once beautiful and great City would be burning to the ground right now,” Trump posted to Truth Social on Tuesday morning. 

Married counselor who enticed student into sexual encounters learns punishment

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An Ohio school administrator, who was married with children, was sentenced to three years in prison on Tuesday for having sex with a teen student in her office.

Emily Nutley, a 43-year-old former counselor who worked with at-risk students at St. Xavier High School in Cincinnati, pleaded guilty to sexual battery in April, and must also now register as a Tier 3 sex offender every 90 days during her life, WLWT’s Karin Johnson reports.

Although Ohio law does not mandate a prison term for such a crime, the victim’s family called for the maximum possible sentence. Ohio asked for a five-year sentence, while the defense asked for probation.

A sentencing memorandum obtained by the Cincinnati Enquirer said text messages showed Nutley initiated the sexual relationship with the male student in late 2023. Nutley had texted the student, who was 17 at the time, sent nude photos of herself to him and had at least four sexual encounters with him.

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When the teen tried to end things with Nutley, who was 42 at the time, the documents state that “she threatened to kill herself” and paid him to keep quiet about the relationship.

The student told his parents about the situation on Oct. 7, 2024, and met with school administrators the following day, the newspaper reported. On Oct. 11, 2024, the school fired Nutley after an internal investigation.

In the memorandum, prosecutors likened Nutley to “most pedophiles,” saying that she “preyed on the most defenseless person she could find.”

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Nutley’s attorney, Joe Suhre, filed a separate sentencing memorandum, describing her as a “broken woman” who suffered from mental illness and alcohol abuse and was a survivor of sexual abuse.

Suhre said that when the sexual encounters with the student began, Nutley was depressed over the death of her brother and the dissolution of her marriage. He said a psychologist treating her found her behavior to be tied to “unresolved trauma.”

Prosecutors wrote that the student “will pay the price for the rest of his life” over Nutley’s actions.

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Since her conviction in April, Nutley has been in a treatment program for those convicted of sex crimes, Suhre said.