No. 4 UConn, underperfoming Marquette tangle in Big East clash

No. 4 UConn will look to keep its dominant start to Big East conference play rolling along as the Huskies host Marquette on Sunday afternoon in Storrs, Conn.

The Christmas break did nothing to slow down the Huskies (13-1, 3-0), who took down Xavier 90-67 on Wednesday night in Cincinnati.

Alex Karaban led the way with 19 points and seven boards, while Braylon Mullins and Solo Ball each added 17. The Huskies knocked down 13 of their 28 3-point attempts (46.4%).

"I thought Alex set a tone and played a game. He's been Big East Player of the Year, All-American level player for us," Huskies coach Dan Hurley said. "Most under-appreciated great player in college basketball."

Ball leads a balanced scoring attack with an average of 15.5 points per game, with Karaban (14), Tarris Reed Jr. (14) and Mullins (10.2) not far behind. Silas Demary Jr. leads with 5.9 assists per game.

Marquette (5-9, 0-3) meanwhile is coming in off perhaps the most disappointing loss of a season that has been full of such setbacks.

The Golden Eagles held a double-digit lead midway in the second half and led by seven with three minutes left against Seton Hall on Tuesday, putting their first conference win and by far the best win of the season well in reach.

Then, the Golden Eagles missed their final 10 shot attempts and saw Seton Hall go on a 13-0 run to close out a 79-73 win in Milwaukee.

"That was as tough of an ending as I've seen in a while. There was a stretch in the second half where we were as lost in the fight and as present as we've been all season," Marquette coach Shaka Smart said. "That's a bitter, bitter pill to swallow."

With the loss, Marquette's best win on the season remains an overtime struggle against Valparaiso that it won 75-72. The Golden Eagles fell against all five Power Four opponents they faced in nonconference play and have lost second-half leads in two of their three Big East games.

Despite their struggles, Marquette does have one of the brighter talents in the Big East in Chase Ross, who leads the team with an average of 16.6 points per game.

However, even Ross' numbers have taken a dive as he had a rough month of December. Over the past five games, he is shooting 27.9% on 2-point attempts and 20% from deep.

Freshman Nigel James Jr. has led the team in conference play, averaging 17.3 points and 4.3 assists and shooting 50% from the floor across the three contests.

This was becoming one of the strongest rivalries in the Big East after Marquette took two of three from UConn in the 2022-23 season and won both the regular season and conference tournament titles.

However since then, the Huskies have won five in a row over Marquette.

The Golden Eagles have not won in a true road game at Connecticut since the 2011-12 season. UConn leads the all-time series 13-8.

--Field Level Media

No. 4 UConn, underperfoming Marquette tangle in Big East clash

No. 4 UConn will look to keep its dominant start to Big East conference play rolling along as the Huskies host Marquet...
Nancy under extreme pressure at Celtic after loss to fierce rival Rangers but says 'nothing changes'

GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) — Wilfried Nancy's job as Celtic manager came under even more intense scrutiny Saturday after a 3-1 home loss to fierce Glasgow rival Rangers in the Old Firm derby, the biggest match in Scottish soccer.

It was a sixth loss in eight games under Nancy since his arrival at Celtic on Dec. 3 and the Frenchman cut a lonely figure after the post-match handshakes as he walked down the tunnel to a backdrop of jeers that greeted the fulltime whistle.

The result left Celtic on the same points as Rangers — though ahead on goal difference — and three behind surprise leader Hearts in aturbulent campaignin the Scottish Premiership.

Nancyleft Columbus Crew in Major League Soccerfor Celtic but lost his first four matches in charge — including a stunning defeat in theScottish League Cup final. There were then back-to-back wins, only for Celtic to lose at Motherwell on Tuesday and then against its biggest foe to home.

"For me, nothing changes," Nancy said after the game against Rangers. "My focus is to help my players to be better, help my team start to be better, and to find a way to turn things around. We are really close to doing good things but (when) we concede goals sometimes it's difficult."

Trailing 1-0 at halftime, Rangers scored three goals in a 21-minute span from the 50th — leading to audible discontent among Celtic fans throughout the second half.

The BBC reported that Celtic supporters gathered outside their stadium after the game in protest at the club's board. Last month, chairman Peter Lawwell resigned and chief executive Michael Nicholson claimed three of his "colleagues" on the board were "assaulted" after the League Cup final, without disclosing further details.

Nancy cited "details at certain moments" as the reason for Celtic's problems.

"I see many, many good things — that's why the frustration is there because we deserve better," he said. "We have to stay together, and everything is going to move forward."

Celtic has been Scottish champion for 13 of the last 14 years.

Under Nancy, Celtic has conceded two or more goals in seven of his eight games in charge.

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Nancy under extreme pressure at Celtic after loss to fierce rival Rangers but says 'nothing changes'

GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) — Wilfried Nancy's job as Celtic manager came under even more intense scrutiny Saturday after ...
Theo Johnson's appearance at Knicks game raised questions after Giants TE was ruled out with an illness

Early Friday afternoon, the New York Giantsreleased their final injury reportfor Week 18 and tight end Theo Johnson was listed as "out" with an illness for Sunday's game against the Dallas Cowboys.

Hours later, Johnson was shown on the Madison Square Garden scoreboard while attending theNew York Knicks game against the Atlanta Hawks. That appearance raised questions about how the second-year tight end could be out in public despite being set to miss the Giants' season finale in two days.

Theo Johnson here at MSG for the#KnicksgameHe's out for Sunday's#Giantsgame with an illness…pic.twitter.com/0PjjOBv2Qv

— Jared Schwartz (@jschwartz115)January 3, 2026

Johnson eventook to Instagram on Friday nightand posted a story with the caption, "I am not sick."

This wasn't a case of the tanking theory that the Giants were keeping players out for a second straight week in hopes of oflanding the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. According to the team, Johnson is dealing with a non-contagious infection, "not the flu or COVID, where being around other people is a risk."

Interim head coach Mike Kafka was asked on Thursday about Johnson's week-long stay on the injury report with an illness. "So he's just still got a little bit of a sickness and just infection that we're just working through. So he's just kind of trying to clean it up, see where it goes,"he said.

Johnson was one of six Giants ruled out for Week 18, along with cornerback Cor'Dale Flott, safety Jevón Holland, offensive lineman Evan Neal, defensive lineman Rakeem Nuñez-Roches Sr. and wide receiver Wan'Dale Robinson.

The Giants needed to lose to the Las Vegas Raiders last week to secure the No. 1 pick. They did not,winning 34-10. Despite that, they still have a chance to own the top selection, but they need help in Week 18.

On Sunday, theGiants need to lose to the Cowboys, have the Raiders beat the Kansas City Chiefs, and get 1 1/2 combined wins (a tie equals half a win) from the Atlanta Falcons, Chicago Bears, Cleveland Browns, and Seattle Seahawks.

Theo Johnson's appearance at Knicks game raised questions after Giants TE was ruled out with an illness

Early Friday afternoon, the New York Giantsreleased their final injury reportfor Week 18 and tight end Theo Johnson was l...
US President Donald Trump and Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. - Getty Images

Expressions of unbridled power don't come blunter thanabducting a sitting presidentfrom his capital in the dead of night.

President Donald Trump has shown in a 74-word social media post that he can act decisively, suddenly and perhaps recklessly, in pursuit of his varied and varying foreign policy goals, with little regard for precedent, consequence or it seems, international law.

The operation to take Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife from their heavily guarded location in Caracas to – presumably – face the American court system, does follow a predictable, albeit extreme, pattern for what the US calls a fugitive, with a $50 million bounty on his head.

But there is a grave exception here: Maduro is a head of state, whose nation is prey to various ongoing US political objectives. Whatever the indictments say, this will always feel political.

Successive White Houses have wanted to remove Venezuela's left-leaning, yet autocratic and at times violent, regime – whether for fighting drug trafficking, or for their oil, or for regional alignment.

The second Trump term promoted an end to Maduro's role as kingpin of a vast regional narco-trafficking network as key to its rationale. But they ran into a paradox when suggesting Maduro just leave power: He could not be both the kingpin and a man who could walk out on his role at the drop of a hat.

The evidence that Maduro was top of the regional tree was also not as substantial as the White House would have hoped. Yes, Venezuela undoubtedly permitted drug trafficking from its airspace and shores, with the top, global cocaine producer Colombia just over the border. But Mexico and Colombia's cartels were bigger players – yet seemed to attract less US military focus. The idea of somehow bringing this multi-billion industry to a close in Venezuela – an industry that millions of Americans are clients of weekly – is itself unrealistically ambitious. The incentives for traffickers are just simply too great. They could hope to disrupt, or inconvenience, but not stop.

Deep in the heart of this staggering operation lies Washington's wider ambitions for greater control of its near-abroad, for what they have termed an updated Monroe Doctrine – with a "Trump Corollary", to quote the latest White House National Security Strategy. They've offered bail out libertarian Argentinian president Javier Milei, scolded leftist Colombia leader Gustavo Petro, clashed with Brazil's Lula and cosied up to El Salvador's authoritarian Bukele. But the Caracas operation is not a rhetorical slight, rather the violent extraction of a political irritant.

A pliant Venezuela is better for US hydrocarbon markets, yet oil is less the guiding light of foreign policy in the United States, now a top producer itself. This is not 2003. Venezuela's resources would be helpful, but not the golden amulet its opposition leader Maria Corina Machado has touted.

A key, real Trump "corollary" to this action, is migration. At least 700,000 Venezuelans migrants are in the United States, despite a recent bid to remove their temporary protected status. A stable, prosperous and calm Venezuela is a place they could be returned to, forcibly or willingly. But we are far from that moment on Saturday morning.

As it stands, what comes next is wildly unclear. Delcy Rodriguez, the vice president, is likely Maduro's successor, but will she be willing to stomach the same risk of abduction, or seek an immediate détente with the White House? On the streets of Venezuela, it is also uncertain if this ignites anti-American fury as the toll of the operation becomes clear, or ushers in days of celebration at the end of a dictatorship that has mismanaged Venezuelans' economy into freefall.

One side-effect is the impact this move has for Trump's place on the world stage as a ditherer, lacking conviction, focus, or the ability to absorb (and keep secret) detail. The operation was daring, well-planned (in that it succeeded) and shows for the second time this year that Trump is willing to indulge ideas his predecessors would have laughed out of the Situation Room. Thestrikes on Iran's nuclear siteswere a similar outlying call, but, thus far, seem to have kept Tehran's program curbed. Yes, Trump can act in ways that are reckless, unprecedented and risk horrific escalation. But you cannot suggest he lacks the courage to act, even if it feels foolhardy at the time.

This sends a message to Moscow and Beijing – both allies to Maduro in varying degrees – who have let their comrade fall, without so much as a care package in the mail. Trump is not gun-shy, or unwilling to risk wider conflict, if the outcome is one he deeply yearns for, or thinks is in reach.

It also displays the ongoing, unmatched supremacy of the US military: whether it is Bin Laden in Abbottabad, or Ayman al-Zawahiri in Kabul, or Maduro in his own capital. And while Putin's bid to decapitate the Ukrainian government were thwarted, leaving his armored vehicles aflame and log-jammed outside Kyiv, Trump's special forces have whisked Maduro likely to a New York courthouse. It will be clear in the months ahead whether this operation impacts any calculus in Beijing about testing Trump over Taiwan. But they cannot count on Washington sitting any invasion out.

The exhilaration of whisking away a dictator to trial will fade fast and the real, gaping problems of daily Venezuela loom large again. Maduro's departure is a win for Trump, but chaos or collapse after him would be a cascading loss. The plan for "what next" is more important than the staggering display of US might over Caracas' skies on early Saturday morning.

Maduro's removal does not anoint a successor with a real popular mandate. Or resolve where the military's loyalties now lie. Or hobble the narco-trafficker colossus the US says Maduro led. Instead, it demands fast answers to who leads, who fixes an economy with enduring, ghastly flaws, and who explains to the Venezuelan people the lasting benefits of the hours of terrifying explosions their young and elderly just had to endure in the dead of night.

This story has been updated with additional developments.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump’s snatching of Maduro shows a new level of unrestrained global power

Expressions of unbridled power don't come blunter thanabducting a sitting presidentfrom his capital in the dead of night. President Do...

Pedestrians run after explosions and low-flying aircraft were heard in Caracas, Venezuela, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026. Credit - Matias Delacroix—Associated Press

President Donald Trump said Saturday that the United States had captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro after carrying out a "large-scale" strikeagainst the country.

The extraordinary attack followsmonths of pressurefrom the Trump Administration on Maduro to cede power in the South American country over long-standing accusations of drug trafficking and election rigging.

It represents the largest U.S. military operation in Latin America since the 1989 invasion of Panama, when, as today, the U.S. captured the country's leader, Manuel Antonio Noriega.

The attack is the second major military campaign launched by the president since returning to office a year ago, following widespread airstrikes on Iran's nuclear facilities in June.

In a post on Truth Social, TrumpsaidMaduro and his wife had been "captured and flown out of the Country," adding that the operation "was done in conjunction with U.S. Law Enforcement."

Maduro was indicted on corruption and drug trafficking charges in the U.S. in 2020. The State Department had announced a $50 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

In an interview with Fox & Friends hours after the operation, Trump gave further details about the raid.

"We were going to do this four days ago, but the weather was not perfect, and then all of a sudden it opened up and we said go. He was in a highly guarded — it was like a fortress actually," he said, adding that no American troops were killed.

Trump also told Fox News the U.S. would be involved in deciding Venezuela's future: "We'll be involved in it very much."

"We can't take a chance in letting somebody else run and just take over what he left, or left off," he said.

Vice President JD Vance said Trump had offered Maduro "multiple off ramps, but was very clear throughout this process: the drug trafficking must stop, and the stolen oil must be returned to the United States."

Attorney General Pam BondisaidMaduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, had been indicted in New York and would "soon face the full wrath of American justice on American soil in American courts."

Read more:Trump Advisors and Venezuela Opposition Leaders Plan for Maduro's Departure

Trump's comments came soon after explosions were reported across Venezuela in the early hours of Saturday morning. Witnesses reported strikes in the capital, Caracas, beginning around 2 am local time. Videos posted to social media showed large explosions and what appeared to be U.S. military aircraft flying low over the city.

Venezuelan ruling party leader Nahum Fernández told The Associated Press that Maduro and his wife were at their home within the Ft. Tiuna military installation when they were captured.

"That's where they bombed," he said. "And, there, they carried out what we could call a kidnapping of the president and the first lady of the country."

The Venezuelan government said attacks also occurred in the states of Miranda, Aragua, and La Guaira. Photographs showed parts of Fuerte Tiuna, Venezuela's largest military complex, engulfed in flames.

In a national address, Venezuela's defense minister Gen. Vladimir Padrino Lopez denounced what he called an "invasion" and a "blatant outrage." The statement was the first response from Maduro's government since the strikes began.

Venezuela's Vice President Delcy Rodriguez, who is next in line to take charge of government, said she did not know the whereabouts of either Maduro or his wife.

"We demand that President Donald Trump's government provide immediate proof of life for President Maduro and the First Lady," Rodriguez said in an audio played on state TV.

Picture of fire at Fuerte Tiuna, Venezuela's largest military complex, after a series of explosions in Caracas on January 3, 2026. Loud explosions, accompanied by sounds resembling aircraft flyovers, were heard in Caracas around 2:00 am (0600 GMT) on January 3, an AFP journalist reported. The explosions come as US President Donald Trump, who has deployed a navy task force to the Caribbean, raised the possibility of ground strikes against Venezuela. <span class=Luis Jaimes— AFP via Getty Images" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

President Trump reportedly ordered the strikes inside Venezuela days ago, according to CBS News, after months of threats to expand a U.S. bombing campaign against alleged drug boats to targets inside the country.

Trump has repeatedly called Maduro an illegitimate president and his administration has accused him of running a "narco state", without providing evidence. He said in aninterviewlast month that Maduro's "days are numbered."

Republican U.S. Senator Mike Leesaidthat Secretary of State Marco Rubio had told him Maduro would stand trial on criminal charges in the United States.

"He informed me that Nicolás Maduro has been arrested by U.S. personnel to stand trial on criminal charges in the United States, and that the kinetic action we saw tonight was deployed to protect and defend those executing the arrest warrant," Lee said in a post on X.

He added that Rubio "anticipates no further action in Venezuela now that Maduro is in U.S. custody."

Maduro had earlier declared a state of emergency in response to the attacks, according to a statement from the Venezuelan communications ministry. The statement said the government "rejects, repudiates, and denounces" U.S. military aggression.

Maduro's precise whereabouts are currently unknown.

At least 115 people have been killed since September in the U.S. strikes against alleged boats that the Trump Administration claims are smuggling drugs. Analysts andlegal experts have questionedthe legality of the boat strikes, which have been carried out without congressional approval.

The Trump Administration has been building up military forces in the region for months while ratcheting up threats against Venezuela's government. The Pentagon deployed 10 F-35s to Puerto Rico. The U.S.S. Gerald Ford, thought to be the largest and most advanced aircraft carrier in the world, recently joined eight warships and some 10,000 troops already in the region.

Trump also authorized the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to conduct covert operations in Venezuela. Maduro responded directly to the revelation, calling the move a "desperate" attempt at regime change.

A Pentagon spokesperson referred TIME's questions to the White House. The White House directed TIME to President Trump'sposton Truth Social.

Trump said that he would speak at a news conference at 11 a.m. from Mar-a-Lago, where he is currently staying.

This is a developing story.

Contact usatletters@time.com.

Trump Says U.S. Has Captured Venezuela's President Maduro

Pedestrians run after explosions and low-flying aircraft were heard in Caracas, Venezuela, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026. Credit - Matias Delacroi...
Maria Snider, director of the Rainbow Child Development Center, speaks at a news conference in St. Paul, Minnesota, this week. - Giovanna Dell'Orto/AP

In the days since the Trump administration announced it would freeze federal child care payments to Minnesota amid an allegedfraud investigation, fear and confusion have spread almost as fast as theviral videothat launched the scandal.

Minnesota receives about$185 millionannually in federal child care funding, supporting care for 19,000 children, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services. The state says the money helps cover the cost of routine child care forthousands of low-income familieseach month, allowing parents to work or attend school.

But HHS announced Tuesday it would freeze that funding – and it's not clear if there are any alternate plans for families affected by the freeze.

"Funds will be released only when states prove they are being spent legitimately," Deputy Secretary of HHS Jim O'Neillsaid Tuesday.

Now, families and child care providers are grappling with the cascade of consequences that may soon come if federal funding dries up.

"I'm a parent who receives federal funding for child care for my kiddo," Deko Nor told reporters at a news conference at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul on Wednesday.

"I'm currently a medical student, I rely on child care, I work," she said. "If child care is cut, I'm unable to go to work, or go to school."

A pause stretched on as Nor, who had to skip school to attend the news conference, grew too emotional to continue her remarks.

The child care providers who spoke at the capitol Wednesday said they adamantly opposed fraud and supported efforts to investigate and address any claims of wrongdoing.

But they also said they felt compelled to stand in support of the Somali providers who may be too afraid to speak up after Nick Shirley'svideoclaiming to find widespread fraud at Somali-run child care centers went viral.

The child care centers featured in the video were operating as expected when visited by investigators, the state Department of Children, Youth, and Families said in a news release Friday.

The agency gathered evidence and initiated further review, noting the investigation into four of the centers was ongoing, the report stated.

Minnesota's Twin Cities are home to thenation's largest populationof Somalis, a community that has recently experiencedheightened tensionsover increased immigration enforcement and disparaging remarks from President Donald Trump.

Amanda Schillinger, director of Pumpkin Patch Childcare & Learning Center in Burnsville, Minnesota, said she feels the community is being "unfairly vilified."

Amanda Schillinger, director of Pumpkin Patch Childcare & Learning Center, speaks at a news conference in St. Paul. - WCCO

"The truth is Minnesota has guardrails in place to make defrauding the child care system extremely difficult," she said. "Fraud is never acceptable; but cutting off child care funding to everyone in the state is not the answer, and it's not acceptable."

The Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families doubled down on their commitment to preventing fraud and continuing to support families in the statement on Friday.

But, the agency warned, the distribution of "unvetted or deceptive claims and misuse of tip lines can interfere with investigations, create safety risks for families, providers, and employers, and has contributed to harmful discourse about Minnesota's immigrant communities."

Schillinger said 75% of the children who attend her program qualify for child care funding through the state.

"We can't afford to continue to operate if we lose 75% of our enrollment," she said at the news conference.

Child care workers 'did what they should have'

Mary Solheim comes from a family of educators, and told CNN she's spent the better part of the last 40 years working at a child care facility in Maplewood, just outside St. Paul.

She said she felt compelled to speak out after watching Shirley's video, which has amassed over100 million viewsonline after it was shared by conservative figures.

In the video, Shirley, a 23-year-old content creator who has shared anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim videos in the past, approaches multiple child care centers that he claims are owned by Somalis and demands that they prove children are enrolled in the facilities.

Solheim said her first reaction upon seeing the video was to question why men with a microphone and camera were demanding to see children.

Then later, when two Somali women appear to be barricading the door to prevent Shirley and his team from gaining access, Solheim said she started to feel sick.

"They did what they should have done, which is to protect the children and keep the door shut," she said of the day care workers.

Now, as the administration threatens to pull federal funding from the state, Solheim told CNN she's worried her facility – which has operated for more than 40 years – may not be able to keep its doors open for the children and families who depend on it.

"We run on razor-thin budgets," she said. "If that money is late, which sometimes it is, it may be a four-week wait after we've provided care (until we're paid)."

Last month, the child care center's furnace suddenly went out amid frigid temperatures, and needed to be replaced, she said, wiping out the last of the money in their reserves.

"If all funds are cut off, we are at about two to four weeks before we have to close."

Cutting a 'crucial piece of survival'

Maria Snider, director of the Rainbow Child Development Center in St. Paul, told reporters Wednesday that for many of the center's families, federal child care assistance is a "crucial piece of survival."

Snider said her mother opened the center in 1998 because she saw a need for affordable full-time child care, and they have since remained proud to welcome families who might require child care funding assistance.

"We believe that every child deserves access to high-quality early learning," Snider said. "Many of the families at my center are one paycheck away from becoming homeless – I'm not exaggerating.

"I'm generally scared for what happens next if funding is stopped, and I can't help but think that this is part of a larger designed plan and strategy to cut public funding."

"This is Trump's long game," Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said in asocial media poston Tuesday. "We've spent years cracking down on fraudsters. It's a serious issue - but this has been his plan all along. He's politicizing the issue to defund programs that help Minnesotans."

Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services Jim O'Neill. - Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg/Getty Images/File

State officials convened Wednesday to assess the potential impacts and timing of the funding freeze, Clare Sanford, chair of government relations for the Minnesota Child Care Association, told CNN.

Families typically qualify for child care assistance after providing job information such as tax records, pay stubs and work schedules, showing they meet the income requirements, Sanford said.

Once qualified, parents can enroll their children with licensed providers who participate in the program. Those providers then bill the county on a two-week cycle, providing attendance records for the eligible children, she said.

The federal government foots roughly half of those costs on a sliding scale of payments to county and state officials; in the 2025 fiscal year, the Health and Human Services Department provided about $185 million to Minnesota's child care assistance program.

O'Neill said all future payments to any states "will require a justification and a receipt or photo evidence before we send money."

Snider told reporters her mom called her after seeing O'Neill's posts about receipts.

"We're a family-owned business so my mom called me and said, 'Well, write to them and tell them whatever they want we'll send!' And we will!" Snider said. "We want kids to be able to come to our centers."

"I have no problem complying with anything that they want."

A DOGE-era policy returns

HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon told CNN the requirements O'Neill referenced include "administrative data" for centers not suspected of committing fraud.

The child care centers under scrutiny must provide additional documentation including attendance records, inspection records, internal state discrepancies and any complaints the center received, Nixon said.

"These requirements help ensure the integrity of the program and protect both families and providers," Nixon said. "The onus is on the state to provide additional verification, and until they do so, HHS will not allow the state to draw down their matching funds."

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said his office is "exploring all our legal options to ensure that critical childcare services do not get abruptly slashed based on pretext and grandstanding."

"This hasty, scorched earth-attack is not just wrong, it may well be illegal, and my team and I remain committed to protecting the people of Minnesota to the fullest extent of the law," Ellison said in astatementon Wednesday.

The HHS announcement revives a "Defend the Spend" initiativelaunched by the US Department of Government Efficiency Servicein early 2025. The bid to slash federal funding required HHS grantees, including certain child care programs funded through the Administration for Children and Families, to justify each transaction.

For Head Start, for instance, the requirements meant "short summaries outlining the purpose of the funds" for each request, pera webinarabout the changes. The webinar instructs providers to "allow for extra time between when payments are due and when the request is submitted."

Those requirements have been expanded across ACF programs including child care assistance, HHS said Tuesday through its DOGEaccount on X. The agency will expand its systems to allow "itemized receipts and photographic evidence" and work to make the receipts available to the public, it said.

Somali American community pleads for change

As state leaders and administration officials sparred over the intricacies of federal funding, the manager of a Somali-run day care in Minneapolis said he received a concerning phone call earlier this week.

Nasrulah Mohamed said Nokomis Daycare Center in Minneapolis experienced a break-in. The day care center was not featured in the viral video, according to theMinnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

"As we walked around the day care, we saw that our office door was broken into as well," he said at a news conference streamed by local news stationKMSPon Wednesday,

"Unfortunately, we saw that there was important documentation, enrollment of the children and also employee documentation that was gone."

A hole in the utility room at Nokomis Daycare Center in Minneapolis is seen Wednesday. - KARE

CNN has reached out to the day care for comment and additional information, but did not immediately hear back.

Mohamed said the break-in was "devastating," as is the influx of "hateful messages" they've received since Shirley's video.

"This is frightening and exhausting," he said.

"I want to say that there are hundreds of Somali day cares that are out there, and we all help our children and everyone in our community," Mohamed said. "I want to say no intimidation is going to stop us."

But a parent whose children attend the day care center said she is scared.

"Being a Somali American, I was always told that it is safe here and that you are welcome here, and this is no longer the story that I feel and my kids feel," the mom said through an interpreter.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Minnesota families and child care providers scramble as federal funds hang in balance

In the days since the Trump administration announced it would freeze federal child care payments to Minnesota amid an allegedfraud investig...
D.C. pipe bomb suspect must stay in pre-trial custody, judge rules

WASHINGTON — A federal magistrate judge on Friday ordered that the Virginia man accused ofplanting pipe bombs in the nation's capital on Jan. 5, 2021,remains detained ahead of his trial, determining that he posed a "potential danger" to the public.

Federal prosecutors allegethat Brian Cole, 30,planted explosive devices at the Republican and Democratic parties' headquarters nearly five years ago. He's been in custody since his Dec. 4 arrest, when he was charged with transporting an explosive device and attempted malicious destruction by means of explosive materials.

"Although home incarceration and a GPS monitor would provide some check against Mr. Cole's ability to carry out any menacing or dangerous conduct in the community, the Court is simply not satisfied these conditions rise to the necessary level," Magistrate Judge Matthew Sharbaugh wrote in his ruling.

"This is particularly true based on the severity of the potential danger Mr. Cole is alleged to pose, given his alleged persistent acquisition and retention of so-called 'bombmaking parts,' and given his reported penchant and capacity to create explosive devices and deploy them in public settings."

"If the plan had succeeded, the results could have been devastating: creating a greater sense of terror on the eve of a high-security Congressional proceeding, causing serious property damage in the heart of Washington, D.C., grievously injuring DNC or RNC staff and other innocent bystanders, or worse," Sharbaugh wrote.

Cole has not yet entered a plea in the case.

Cole's attorneys wanted him to be released into the custody of his grandmother. The government objected to his release, describing him as showing a pattern of "comprehensive deception" and saying it did not trust him to keep to the conditions of his release.

In a federal court filing on Tuesday, Cole's attorneys said he has beendiagnosed with autismspectrum disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The filing described his diagnosis as a mild form of autism.

Defense attorney Mario Williams told the judge on Tuesday that Cole has spent the last five years following the same routine as he typically does and has kept the same job with his family's bail bonds business over several years with no attempt to flee. Cole's autism and OCD disorder is partially why he follows the same routines every day, Williams said.

Cole's attorneys argued that the government has not presented any evidence that suggests evasive conduct or resistance to law enforcement.

But in a motion filed Sunday, the government alleged that Cole wore a face mask and gloves the night he planted the bombs, as well as wiping down the bombs with disinfectant. The government said Cole also performed a factory reset of his phone more than 900 times between December 2020 and the day he was arrested.

Federal prosecutors urged the judge to keep Cole in detention, alleging that Cole felt "extreme acts of violence" were justified because of hisdislike of both political parties. The motion said that the man told FBI agents that "something just snapped" after he had watched "everything getting worse."

He directed his ire at the Democratic and Republican parties because "they were in charge," Cole told agents, according to the government filing.

Prosecutors confirmed in the filing Sunday that Cole told agents he thought it looked like "something was wrong" with the election and that he followed the situation on platforms such as YouTube and Reddit. According to prosecutors, Cole said that Trump supporters who believed the election was being "tampered with" shouldn't be called "conspiracy theorists," "bad people," "Nazis," or "fascists."

He is alleged to have told agents that he didn't align politically with his family members and that he didn't tell them he was "going to a protest in support of [then President] Trump."

Cole was allegedly inspired to use pipe bombs by his interest inThe Troubles in Northern Ireland, the sectarian war between Catholics and Protestants that escalated into violence in the 1970s. The violence, which included bombing attacks, went on for three decades.

According to the government's filing, Cole did not test the devices before planting them and they failed to go off as planned.

"Ultimately, it was luck, not lack of effort, that the defendant failed to detonate one or both of his devices and that no one was killed or maimed due to his actions," the government filing said. "Indeed, the defendant admitted that he set both devices to detonate 60 minutes after he placed them."

Gary Grumbach reported from Washington, D.C. Doha Madani reported from New York City.

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