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00:00Did Homeland Security ignore a federal judge and deport more than 100 migrants anyway?
00:07The new timeline and where those planes actually went.
00:10Plus, will America ever see the full video of that follow-up boat strike in the Caribbean?
00:15Why Trump now seems to be backing away.
00:17And months after that high-profile suspension, Jimmy Kimmel just got a new deal.
00:24The stories that matter, clear and credible, from across the country to around the world.
00:30These are your unbiased updates from Straight Arrow News.
00:36Good morning, I'm Craig DeGrelli.
00:37This morning, a federal judge is turning up the heat on the Trump administration,
00:41saying he still doesn't know whether Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem
00:45defied his order to stop a mass deportation flight.
00:49But he's now taking extraordinary steps to get answers.
00:53U.S. District Judge James Bosberg has ordered a top Department of Justice attorney
00:57to take the witness stand, a rare move to explain how more than 100 men were deported in March
01:04under the Alien Enemies Act, despite his attempt to halt the flights.
01:08Bosberg wants testimony next week from Drew Ensign, a deputy assistant attorney general,
01:13and from former DOJ prosecutor Erez Ruveni, who has accused the administration of dodging court orders.
01:20The deportations, two planes sent to El Salvador's notorious Seacotton megaprison,
01:25took off before the judge could issue his temporary restraining order.
01:29That timeline has triggered a full-blown contempt inquiry
01:32into whether the administration deliberately made sure the planes were gone
01:36before the court could intervene.
01:39In a new filing, Judge Bosberg said DHS Secretary Kristi Noem's sworn declaration
01:44does not provide enough information to determine whether she willfully violated the court.
01:50Noem says she moved forward only after receiving legal advice from DOJ leadership.
01:56In a separate immigration fight, an immigration judge has ordered the release of Bruna Ferreira,
02:01a Brazilian woman and the mother of White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt's nephew.
02:07Ferreira, who once held DACA status and is seeking a green card,
02:11had been in ICE custody as she fought possible deportation.
02:14She will now be allowed to continue that case outside detention.
02:18A walk back from President Trump on that controversial boat strike video
02:23after saying last week he had no problem releasing the unedited footage.
02:27Now he's flatly denying ever making that promise.
02:30When pressed by a reporter asking again if he'd release the full video,
02:33here is what Trump said.
02:35Mr. President, you said you would have no problem with releasing the full video
02:38of that strike on September 2nd off the coast of Venezuela.
02:41Secretary Hegstead now says...
02:43I didn't say that. You said that. I didn't say that. This is ABC fake news.
02:47You said that you would have no problem releasing the full video.
02:49Okay, well, Secretary Hegstead...
02:51Whatever Hegstead wants to do is okay with me.
02:53He now says it's under review. Are you ordering the secretary to release that full video?
02:57Whatever he decides is okay with me.
02:59That shift comes as pressure builds in Washington.
03:03Lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats are now using the massive 3,086-page defense policy bill
03:10to force the Pentagon's hand.
03:12About 800-plus pages in, they've tucked in a provision with real teeth.
03:17A quarter of Pete Hegstead's travel budget is frozen until Congress gets the unedited video
03:23of American strikes on suspected drug smuggling boats, including the September 2nd operation
03:28that left two survivors dead in a follow-up attack.
03:32Top Pentagon officials have already shown the footage to a small group of lawmakers behind closed doors,
03:37but they sharply disagree on what it shows.
03:40Some Republicans say it vindicates the military.
03:43Democrats say it raises serious questions and want it released publicly.
03:47That defense bill is expected to clear the House this week and move to the Senate without changes.
03:54The Supreme Court looks poised to hand the Trump administration a major win,
03:58one that could give the president far more power to remove top officials from independent agencies,
04:04even for political or policy reasons.
04:07The case centers on Trump's firing of federal trade commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter,
04:12a Democrat, earlier this year.
04:14Under a 1935 federal law, presidents can only remove leaders of independent boards for cause.
04:21Slaughter's ouster was a direct challenge to that rule,
04:24and analysts say it's part of Trump's broader push to exert more control over independent agencies.
04:30Inside the courtroom, the conservative majority appeared ready to back the president,
04:34just as Brett Kavanaugh noting that these commissioners, quote,
04:37are not elected and exercise massive power over individual liberty and billion-dollar industries.
04:44The impact could be sweeping, potentially ending the independence of more than 20 bipartisan agencies
04:49that oversee everything from monetary policy to consumer safety to broadcast licensing.
04:55But the liberal wing warned of a constitutional earthquake.
04:59Justice Sonia Sotomayor told the Trump administration's lawyer,
05:02you're asking us to destroy the structure of government.
05:05A final decision is expected by June.
05:07Now to a major shakeup inside the Justice Department.
05:11Alina Habba, the former personal attorney to President Trump and his hand-picked U.S. attorney in New Jersey, is out.
05:18She resigned Monday, just days after a federal appeals court ruled she had been serving in the role unlawfully.
05:25Habba was one of Trump's most high-profile U.S. attorney appointments,
05:29and stalled after her Senate confirmation, stalled.
05:32But last week, a unanimous three-judge panel said the administration's workarounds violated federal vacancy law,
05:39effectively stripping Habba of authority and freezing parts of New Jersey's federal docket.
05:44In a statement on social media, Habba said she's stepping down to protect the stability and integrity of the office,
05:51adding, quote,
05:51This decision will not weaken the Justice Department, and it will not weaken me.
05:56She will now serve as a senior advisor to Attorney General Pam Bondi,
06:00overseeing U.S. attorneys nationwide, while the DOJ prepares an appeal.
06:05Trump was asked by reporters on Monday his reaction to it all.
06:08You've got a blue slip thing that's horrible.
06:11It's a horrible thing.
06:13It makes it impossible to appoint a judge or a U.S. attorney,
06:16and it's a shame, and the Republicans should be ashamed of themselves that they allow this to go on,
06:22because I can't appoint a U.S. attorney that's not a Democrat,
06:25because they put a block on it.
06:28The president there blaming the Senate's blue slip tradition,
06:31which lets the two home state U.S. senators block nominees
06:35for why Habba and dozens of his picks have been tied up.
06:38I guess I just have to keep appointing people for three months
06:41and then just appoint another one, another one.
06:44And it's a very sad situation.
06:46We're losing tremendous, we're losing a lot of great people.
06:50We have about seven U.S. attorneys who are not going to be able to keep their jobs much longer
06:55because of the blue slip.
06:57Habba's exit comes as several Trump-appointed U.S. attorneys
07:00have also been found to be serving illegally under similar appointment maneuvers.
07:05New Jersey will now be run by a three-prosecutor team
07:08until the White House names a permanent nominee.
07:11President Trump says he's greenlighting NVIDIA to sell its high-end AI chips
07:16to certain approved customers in China,
07:18a significant shift in tech policy with major national security stakes.
07:24In a post on Truth Social, the president said he told China's Xi Jinping
07:28he would allow NVIDIA to sell its advanced H200 AI chips,
07:33but only under a deal where the U.S. government takes a 25% cut of the profits.
07:39Trump also said the sales would happen, quote,
07:41under conditions that allow for continued strong national security,
07:45though he offered no details on what those safeguards are.
07:48He added that Intel and AMD could be part of a similar arrangement.
07:53The Commerce Department is still hammering out the final terms,
07:56including who in China qualifies as an approved customer
07:59and how the profit-sharing would work.
08:02Finally this morning, Jimmy Kimmel isn't going anywhere.
08:05The late-night host just locked in another year with ABC.
08:09Kimmel signed a one-year contract extension
08:11that keeps Jimmy Kimmel live on ABC through May of 2027,
08:16marking nearly 24 years behind the desk.
08:19The new deal comes just months after ABC temporarily pulled his show from the lineup,
08:24a suspension over comments tied to the death of political activist Charlie Kirk,
08:28which sparked a national debate over comedy, free speech, and the role of late-night TV.
08:34Kimmel, who first launched his show in 2003,
08:37remains one of the longest-running hosts in late-night,
08:40and now he's guaranteed at least one more lap.
08:43By the way, I looked it up this morning.
08:44Jimmy Fallon is on through 2028, Kimmel now 2027,
08:48and Colbert is out in early 2026.
08:53So there's your scorecard for late-night TV,
08:54which happens after this morning anchor is fast asleep.
08:58All right, a busy Tuesday on the political calendar.
09:01Here's what we're tracking.
09:02Opponents of the Trump-backed redistricting effort in Missouri
09:05could file enough petition signatures today to force a statewide vote.
09:09At 10, the Supreme Court hears a Republican-led challenge
09:12tied to Vice President J.D. Vance,
09:15arguing that limits on coordinated party spending violate free speech rights.
09:20At 3 p.m., the Vice President hosts a Christmas reception at his residence.
09:25President Trump is expected to attend.
09:27And at 6, the President delivers an address in Monroe County, Pennsylvania,
09:31to spotlight his economic agenda amid concerns about inflation and affordability.
09:36There are headlines worth reading and e-mails worth opening.
09:39Sign up for our Unbiased Updates newsletter,
09:41delivered straight to your inbox each morning.
09:43Go to san.com slash newsletters.
09:46That was your Unbiased Updates for this Tuesday.
09:48We'll see you back here tomorrow.
09:49For all of us here at Straight Arrow News, I'm Craig DiGrelli.
09:52Have a great day.
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