Misconduct complaint dismissed against judge who handled El Salvador prison deportation case

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal appeals court judge has dismissed a misconduct complaint filed by the Justice Department against a judge who clashed with PresidentDonald Trump's administration overdeportations to a notorious prison in El Salvador.

The complaint against U.S. District JudgeJames E. Boasbergwas dismissed on Dec. 19 by Jeffrey S. Sutton, chief judge of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals but the order only came to light this weekend.

The complaint stemmed from remarks that Boasberg, the chief judge in the district court in the nation's capital, allegedly made in March 2025 to Chief Justice John Roberts and other federal judges at a judicial conference saying the administration would trigger a constitutional crisis by disregarding federal court rulings. The meeting took place days before Boasberg issued an order blocking deportation flights that Trump was carrying outby invoking wartime authoritiesfrom an 18th century law.

In the dismissal order, Sutton said the Justice Department never provided a listed attachment to provide proof of what Boasberg said or the context of the alleged statement at the closed-door conference.

"A recycling of unadorned allegations with no reference to a source does not corroborate them. And a repetition of uncorroborated statements rarely supplies a basis for a valid misconduct complaint," said Sutton, who was appointed by President George W. Bush to the appeals court circuit that covers Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee.

Spokespeople for the Justice Department and for Boasberg's court did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

Even if Boasberg had made the comments, Sutton said it would not be "so far afield" from topics discussed at the gathering and would not violate ethics rules. Sutton noted that Roberts' 2024 year-end report raised general concerns about threats to judicial independence, security concerns for judges and respect for court orders throughout the nation's history.

The misconduct complaint was filed with Judge Sri Srinivasan, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, but Srinivasan asked Roberts to transfer it to another appeals court circuit because it was still considering appeals related to the deportation case, according to the dismissal order. Roberts transferred it to the 6th Circuit, it said.

Misconduct complaint dismissed against judge who handled El Salvador prison deportation case

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal appeals court judge has dismissed a misconduct complaint filed by the Justice Department agai...
Partial government shutdown expected to extend longer than anticipated

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Sunday morning that his caucus will meet later in the day to map out its next steps over its demands for reforms to the Department of Homeland Security as a partial government shutdown went into its second day.

The Senate on Friday voted to separate a DHS funding bill from five others funding other agencies for the rest of the fiscal year after reaching a deal with the White House to put it off for two weeks to negotiate Democratic demands for restrictions on Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid its immigration enforcement operation, including requiring agents to wear body cameras turned on and to not wear masks.

House Speaker Mike Johnson hoped to vote on the funding bills on Monday when the House returns under suspension of the rules, which would have required a two-thirds majority.

But on Saturday, Jeffries said Democrats will not join Republicans in expediting the passage of the Senate package, telling MSNOW, "We need a full and complete debate, and what I've made clear to House Republicans is that they cannot simply move forward with legislation taking a 'my way or the highway' approach."

Ken Cedeno/Reuters - PHOTO: The U.S. Capitol on day two of a partial government shutdown in Washington

Johnson told Fox News on Sunday that he is confident the package will pass by Tuesday.

"We'll have a lot of conversations to have with individual Republican members over the next 24 hours or so," Johnson said. "We'll get all this done by Tuesday, I'm convinced."

Johnson will now have to first pass the package through the House Rules Committee before it can be taken to the floor for a vote so Republicans can attempt to pass the package with a simple majority.

The committee announced Saturday that a markup on the Senate-passed funding package is set for Monday at 4 p.m. -- the first of several steps before the package can receive a full vote on the House floor. It is unclear if Johnson has the necessary GOP support to advance the package given his slim majority.

ABC News - PHOTO: House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries appears on ABC News'

Jeffries told ABC News' "This Week" anchor George Stephanopoulos on Sunday that Democrats want an agreement on their demands for reforms at DHS.

"We need a robust path toward dramatic reform," he told ABC News' "This Week" on Sunday. "The administration can't just talk the talk. They need to walk the walk. That should begin today, not in two weeks."

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Sunday that Trump will be the "decider" on any policy change when it comes to immigration enforcement reforms but said he is willing to negotiate with Democrats.

"Last week, the White House invited moderate Democrat senators to come to the White House and to discuss their concerns so that we can hear them out and at least see what they are trying to put on the table," Leavitt told Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures. "Unfortunately, that meeting was blocked by their leadership, so these conversations will continue and ultimately, the president will be the decider on any policy changes."

Some Democrats questioned whether Trump really wanted change to the country's immigration enforcement policy.

Rep. Ro Khanna said he would vote against the DHS funding bill.

"I just don't see how, in good conscience, Democrats can vote for continuing ICE funding when they're killing American citizens, when there's no provision to repeal the tripling of the budget. I hope my colleagues will say no."

Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy said he hasn't seen a willingness from Trump to come to the negotiating table.

"He's not convening any process to bring Republicans together to try to reform our laws, Murphy told "Fox News Sunday." "Donald Trump wants to use the issue of immigration to divide us from each other, to try to make us believe that our neighbors, our lawful resident neighbors, are something that we have to fear."

Republican Rep. Michael McCaul criticized Border Patrol commander at large Gregory Bovino for inflaming the ICE's immigration reform effort in Minneapolis and said he thought White House border czar Tom Homan being dispatched there could deescalate tensions.

"He put his agents in a position they should never have been put in. They have no training for crowd control. Their job is to go in and remove criminal aliens, violent felons from the United States, and get them out of here," McCaul told "Face the Nation." And so, you know, Tom Homan is a consummate professional. He's been doing this for a long time. I've known him for a long time. He's going to go back to the core mission of ICE , and that's targeted law enforcement operations, not roving the streets, causing chaos."

Senate TV - PHOTO: Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks on the floor of the Senate in Washington, Jan. 30, 2026.

Last-minute Senate vote

The latest uncertainty in the government funding saga comes after the Senate met a last-minute deadline Friday to approve the revised package of government funding bills for the rest of the fiscal year.

The vote was 71-29, with only five Republicans voting against: Sens. Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, Mike Lee, Ron Johnson and Rick Scott.

The Senate voted after Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham lifted his hold after securing a commitment from Senate Majority Leader John Thune for a vote in the coming weeks on banning sanctuary cities.

Senate TV - PHOTO: Sen. Lindsey Graham speaks on the floor of the Senate in Washington, Jan. 30, 2026.

Graham earlier Friday said he would lift his hold for a vote on his sanctuary cities bill and one which allows members of Congress to sue the government if federal investigators gain access to their phone records without their knowledge. Those provisions were stripped out of the funding package initially passed by the House.

Government funding negotiations hit snag after Democrats announce deal

The funding fight over DHS erupted in the aftermath of the death of Alex Pretti, an ICU nurse, who was killed in a shooting involving federal law enforcement in Minneapolis over the weekend.

With Senate passage in the rear-view mirror, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer laid out the pillars of reform to the Homeland Security bill that Democrats will fight to enact over the next two weeks.

"The bottom line is very simple: the American people are crying out for change," Schumer said immediately following the Senate vote Friday evening. "This is not America, not America. And when you see those images, know that something is dramatically wrong and it must change. We are fighting to change it. Will our Republican colleagues join us now?"

With only two weeks to negotiate changes, Schumer stressed that Democrats will demand an end to roving patrols, enforce accountability and mandate masks off and body-cameras turned on.

"If our colleagues are not willing to enact real change, real strong change, they should not expect Democratic votes," Schumer said. "We have only a few days to deliver real progress for the American people, the eyes of the nation are watching."

Schumer said he intends to huddle with Thune to set the parameters of negotiations -- not necessarily President Donald Trump.

"We're going to have a group of Democrats negotiate. We're going to have to negotiate with the Republicans to get this done," Schumer said. "But as we've said over and over again, they shouldn't expect our votes if they're not willing to go along with strong legislation."

"We need Democrats and Republicans in the Senate to pass this, so I'm going to talk to Thune," he said.

Partial government shutdown expected to extend longer than anticipated

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Sunday morning that his caucus will meet later in the day to map out its next ...
Teenagers charged in Louisiana parade shootings that injured child, 4 others

CLINTON, La. (AP) — Authorities in Louisiana said Sunday they have arrested two teenagers in the shootings of a 6-year-old child and four others wounded during a small town's weekend parade.

The suspects, ages 19 and 15, are charged with attempted murder, obstructing justice and reckless discharge of a firearm, the East Feliciana Parish Sheriff's Office said in a statement posted on social media.

Gunfire sent people scrambling for cover Saturday during the Mardi Gras in the Country Parade in Clinton, located about 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Baton Rouge.

All five victims were expected to survive, sheriff's Chief Criminal Deputy Bill Cox toldThe Advocateon Saturday. The department said Sunday it was unaware of any changes in the victims' conditions.

The sheriff's office said Sunday the two teenagers charged were among three people detained Saturday after they were found with guns near the parade.

The third person, a 26-year-old man, has been charged with illegally possessing a firearm, according to the sheriff's office, but investigators do not believe he was involved in the shootings.

Authorities have not given a suspected motive for the shootings. More arrests are expected, the sheriff's office statement said.

Investigators have asked for anyone with photos or video of the shooting or nearby areas to share those with authorities.

Teenagers charged in Louisiana parade shootings that injured child, 4 others

CLINTON, La. (AP) — Authorities in Louisiana said Sunday they have arrested two teenagers in the shootings of a 6-year-ol...
Australian Open: Novak Djokovic may be the greatest now, but Carlos Alcaraz is coming for his GOAT status

Now thathe has won the Australian Open, now that he is the youngest man to complete the career Grand Slam, now that the major title count is at No. 7 with so much career runway to go, we no longer need to be afraid of saying what is obvious.

Yahoo Sports Carlos Alcaraz kisses the trophy after beating Novak Djokovic to win the Australian Open. (IZHAR KHAN / AFP via Getty Images)

Novak Djokovic may currently stand as the greatest and most accomplished tennis player of all time, but Carlos Alcaraz is the most gifted person who has ever held a racket.

We are watching Michael Jordan in 1992, Tiger Woods in 2000, Secretariat in 1973. The job is not done, the résumé is still evolving, and the records are not yet theirs.

But our eyes do not deceive us.

This smiling Spanish prodigy, this whirling dervish of speed and power and mental genius, has crossed the threshold between what we thought he could be and what he really is: An absolute monster whose entire package of skills is unequaled by anyone who has ever played tennis.

As someone who grew up on Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi, who cherished how Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal changed the sport and who has grown to appreciate the way Djokovic maintained his body and evolved his game to stay relevant into his late 30s, I don't think that's hyperbole.

Alcaraz has everything. He is him. And he's only going to get better.

Alcaraz's 2-6, 6-2, 6-3, 7-5 victory in Sunday's Australian Open finallooked the way it probably should have looked between a 22-year-old and a 38-year-old who both played five-set marathons in the semifinals. Djokovic came out on fire, playing arguably one of the best sets of his career, and then began to fade as the younger man imposed his superior physicality. Alcaraz took the punch, started to work Djokovic into the corners and steadily asserted control over the proceedings. In the end, it wasn't all that close.

Despite what was on the line in this match — the career Slam versus Djokovic becoming the oldest man in the Open Era to win a major — starting to think about Alcaraz's place among the all-time greats is not based on this one match. Nor was this Australian final the passing-of-the-torch moment because that happened long before now.

This is about Alcaraz, now having conquered all four tournaments that define tennis greatness, thrusting himself into different conversations. Two years ago, he was picking off majors while working around his flaws. Now, he has none.

It has been a bit cliché to say that Alcaraz combines the best attributes of the Big Three — Roger Federer's creativity and flair, Nadal's competitive spirit and Djokovic's technical mastery. But there's really no case against it. Alcaraz already had all the shots and world-class athleticism when he came on tour as a teenager. But as he's grown up, Alcaraz has added so many layers to his tactical development and sharpened his in-match concentration that it brings to mind what Bobby Jones said in 1965 about Jack Nicklaus, who in turn used the same phrase about Tiger Woods: "He plays a game with which I am not familiar."

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Spain's Carlos Alcaraz (R) speaks with Serbia's Novak Djokovic after victory during their men's singles final match on day fifteen of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on February 1, 2026. (Photo by Paul Crock / AFP via Getty Images) / -- IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE --

When Nicklaus said that, Woods was on his way to winning his fifth major at the 2000 PGA Championship. At that moment, it seemed a given he would surpass Nicklaus' record of 18.

As we know now, that never happened. Injuries and self-inflicted adversity got in the way, leaving Woods with 15. But for those fortunate enough to remember Woods' peak, the golf we watched him play was simply better than anything anyone had ever seen.

That's where we are with Alcaraz now. This level of tennis is something completely new and different, and it comes from a young man in a big hurry to rewrite the history of the sport.

Already, he is in a club with just nine names: Djokovic, Nadal, Federer, Agassi, Roy Emerson, Rod Laver, Don Budge and Fred Perry are the only men who won all four Slams.

What we don't know yet is whether 24 majors — the most sacred of Djokovic's many records — will eventually come into play. The gap is still huge, and so many things can happen, from injuries to major life changes to motivation to another all-time great coming along whose name we don't yet know.

But at the rate he's going, Alcaraz would need to average two majors per year until he's 31 to break the record. It's crazy to say, given how hard these tournaments are to win, but that feels firmly within the realm of possibility because there really are no more questions for Alcaraz to answer.

Could he win on all surfaces? Yes. Could he eliminate the dips in focus that made things more complicated than they needed to be earlier in his career? It was only a matter of time. Could he turn his serve from a decent shot into a weapon? It happened in one offseason. Could he do it without Juan Carlos Ferrero in his coaching box? Well, he just did.

That last one may not resonate much with casual fans, butthestory of tennis' offseason was Alcaraz separating from the coach who essentially raised him. This was more than just a professional relationship. Ferrero was almost like a second father, and his presence in the biggest moments often seemed like the support blanket Alcaraz needed when he was forced to manage stressful situations.

The details of their break-up are still murky, but they don't matter much. It was just another hurdle for Alcaraz to conquer, and he went to Australia and cleared it with ease. His semifinal win over Alexander Zverev, breaking serve in the fifth set to stay in the tournament, was maybe the most mentally tough victory of his young career.

So what's next? What's remaining?

Just the history left to be made, and putting the numbers behind what our eyes tell us.

While Djokovic, for now, is still the greatest of all time, Alcaraz is the best thing tennis has ever seen.

Australian Open: Novak Djokovic may be the greatest now, but Carlos Alcaraz is coming for his GOAT status

Now thathe has won the Australian Open, now that he is the youngest man to complete the career Grand Slam, now that the m...
LeBron James' All-Star selection streak is at stake, with NBA set to announce reserves

LeBron James' record streak of All-Star Game selections will be on the line Sunday evening, when theNBAreleases the list of 14 players chosen as reserves for the Feb. 15 midseason showcase event.

James is the All-Star record holder in a number of categories. Among them: his active streak of 21 consecutive selections for the game, along with 20 All-Star appearances and 434 points scored in those contests.

The Los Angeles Lakers star was not chosen as a starter this season in the process that includes voting from fans, media and other players. NBA head coaches choose the reserves and, if necessary, Commissioner Adam Silver will select any additional players necessary for the All-Star rosters should someone need to be replaced because of injury.

James did not play in last season's All-Star event because of injury.

This season's All-Star Game has a tournament format —U.S. vs. The World, with three teams of at least eight players going head to head in 12-minute games. Each team is guaranteed two games in the round-robin event, with the best two meeting again in a championship game.

The players chosen last month as starters: Milwaukee's Giannis Antetokounmpo, Boston's Jaylen Brown, Detroit's Cade Cunningham, Philadelphia's Tyrese Maxey, New York's Jalen Brunson, Golden State's Stephen Curry, the Lakers' Luka Doncic, Oklahoma City's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Denver's Nikola Jokic and San Antonio's Victor Wembanyama.

The "starter" designation is a bit of a misnomer, since there will be at least 15 players who start in the All-Star Games given that there are three teams. By NBA rule, 10 players are chosen as official "starters" and the 14 others will be listed as "reserves."

Detroit's J.B. Bickerstaff will coach one of the teams. Either San Antonio's Mitch Johnson or Denver's David Adelman will coach another — that will be decided by results of games on Sunday — and the NBA has not revealed how the coach of the third All-Star team will be decided.

Bickerstaff earned his nod because the Pistons lead the Eastern Conference. Johnson or Adelman will go by having the best record in the Western Conference among eligible coaches; Oklahoma City's Mark Daigneault coaches the team with the West's best record, but he cannot coach the All-Star Game this year because he coached in it last season.

The All-Star Game will be played at the Los Angeles Clippers' Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California.

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

LeBron James' All-Star selection streak is at stake, with NBA set to announce reserves

LeBron James' record streak of All-Star Game selections will be on the line Sunday evening, when theNBAreleases the l...
NHL Ticket Sales Are Up, and It Could Be Because of

Sabrina Lantos/HBO MAX; Getty

People Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie in 'Heated Rivalry,' an NHL game Sabrina Lantos/HBO MAX; Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • SeatGeek recently claims that NHL ticket sales are up compared to the same period last year

  • The online ticket marketplace said that the jump seemingly coincided with the premiere of the hit HBO show Heated Rivalry

  • The series follows two male hockey players who become involved in a passionate secret romance while competing for dominance on the ring

NHL ticket sales are up — and it may be because of the showHeated Rivalry.

A recent blog fromSeatGeek, an online ticket marketplace, compared NHL ticket purchase trends from three separate weeks between November 2025 and January 2026 with the same weeks from the previous year.

SeatGeek stated that the number of average tickets sold per game "increased by 24%" between week one and week two in late 2025 — noting that the first episode ofHeated Rivalryaired between the two periods. Ticket sales also remained significantly higher during the third week analyzed.

The site said they found no similar increase over the same period as the previous year.

SeatGeek also said that average ticket prices showed a jump afterHeated Rivalryaired, "rising from $127.84 in Week 1 to $142.40 in Week 2."

Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie in 'Heated Rivalry' Courtesy Bell Media

Courtesy Bell Media

They added that there has also been a "surge" in first-time ticket purchasers — meaning in people who have seemingly never bought tickets to a game before — and in solo purchasers.

"Heated Rivalryhas certainly piqued interest in hockeyand the NHL," said SeatGeek's Director of Category Marketing and Endorser Marketing, Chris Leyden, per the blog.

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"We are seeing it both in terms of more people on SeatGeek shopping for NHL tickets, as well as a pretty notable increase in single ticket buyers as more people check out a game, often for the first time ever," he added.

The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now!

While the NHL has not commented on the SeatGeek findings, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman recently toldHockey Newsthat he watched the entire first season of the show in one sitting.

"It's a wonderful story," he said, adding, "The content — particularly for young people — may be a little spicy, so you have to balance that out with how you embrace it."

The wildly popular HBO show follows two male professional hockey players — and intense rivals — who become involved in a passionate secret romance. The series quickly became a sensation and catapulted its two stars,Hudson WilliamsandConnor Storrie, to national fame.

The show is based on a 2019 book of the same name by author Rachel Reid. In a December 2025 essay forMaclean's, Reid discussed the "unlikely" success of a queer sports romance.

"It was unlikely that this show would become a runaway hit, but I'm glad people are enjoying it so much," she said. "I hope the success ofHeated Rivalryencourages publishers to not only seek outqueer romances, but to promote them far and wide."

Read the original article onPeople

NHL Ticket Sales Are Up, and It Could Be Because of “Heated Rivalry” Fever

Sabrina Lantos/HBO MAX; Getty NEED TO KNOW SeatGeek recently claims that NHL ticket sales are up compared to ...
Top Justice Department official plays down chance for charges arising from Epstein files revelations

WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Justice Department official played down the possibility of additional criminal charges arising from theJeffrey Epstein files, saying Sunday that the existence of "horrible photographs" and troubling email correspondence does not "allow us necessarily to prosecute somebody."

Associated Press Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche takes a question from a reporter during a news conference after the Justice Department announced the release of three million pages of documents in the latest Jeffrey Epstein disclosure in Washington, Friday, Jan. 30, 2026. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite) A document with an email chain from Jeffrey Epstein illustrates the amount of redactions of personally identifiable information that the U.S. Department of Justice was required to do before release of Epstein documents, is photographed Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)

Justice Department Jeffrey Epstein

Department officials said over the summer that a review of Epstein-related records did not establish a basis for new criminal investigations.

That position remains unchanged, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said, even as a massive document dump since Friday has focused fresh attention on Epstein's links to powerful individuals around the world and revived questions about what, if any, knowledge the wealthy financier's associates had about his crimes.

"There's a lot of correspondence. There's a lot of emails. There's a lot of photographs. There's a lot of horrible photographs that appear to be taken by Mr. Epstein or people around him," Blanche said Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union." "But that doesn't allow us necessarily to prosecute somebody."

He said that victims of Epstein's sex abuse "want to be made whole," but that "doesn't mean we can just create evidence or that we can just kind of come up with a case that isn't there."

President Donald Trump's Justice Department said Friday that it would be releasing more than 3 million pages of documents along with more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images under a law intended to reveal most of the material it collected during two decades of investigations into Epstein.

The fallout from the release of the files has been swift. A top official in Slovakia left his position after photos and emails revealed he had met with Epstein in the years after Epstein was released from jail. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer suggested that longtime Epstein friendAndrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly known as Prince Andrew, should tell U.S. investigators whether he knows about Epstein's activities.

The revelations continue

The files, posted to the department's website, included documents involving Epstein's friendship with Mountbatten-Windsor, and Epstein's email correspondence with onetime Trump adviser Steve Bannon, New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch and other prominent contacts with people in political, business and philanthropic circles, such as billionairesBill GatesandElon Musk.

The Epstein saga has long fueled public fascination in part because of the financier's past friendships with Trump and former President Bill Clinton. Both men said they had no knowledge Epstein was abusing underage girls.

Among the newly released records was a spreadsheet created last August that summarized calls made to the FBI's National Threat Operation Center or to a hotline set by prosecutors from people claiming to have some knowledge of wrongdoing by Trump. That document included a range of uncorroborated stories involving many different celebrities, and somewhat fantastical scenarios, occasionally with notations indicating what follow-up, if any, was done by agents.

Blanche said Sunday that there were a "ton of people" named in the Epstein files besides Trump and that the FBI had fielded "hundreds of calls" about prominent individuals that were "quickly determined to not be credible."

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Some of Epstein's personal email correspondence contained candid discussions with other people about his penchant for paying women for sex, even after he served jail time for soliciting an underage prostitute. Epsteinkilled himself in a New York jailin August 2019, a month after being indicted on federal sex trafficking charges.

In one 2013 email, a person whose name was blacked out wrote to Epstein about his choice "to surround yourself with these young women in a capacity that bleeds — perhaps, somewhat arbitrarily — from the professional into the personal and back."

"Though these women are young, they are not too young to know that they are making a very particular choice in taking on this role with you," the person wrote. "Especially in the aftermath of your trial which, after all, was public and could be — indeed was — interpreted as a powerful man taking advantage of powerless young women, instead of the other way around."

In another email written in 2009, not long after Epstein had finished serving jail time for his Florida sex crime, another woman, whose name was redacted, excoriated him for breaking a promise that they would spend time alone together and try to conceive a baby.

"I find myself having to question every agreement we have made (no prostitutes staying in the house, in our bed, movies, naps, two weeks Alone, baby...)," She wrote. "Your last minute suggestion to spend THIS weekend with prostitutes is just too much for me to handle. I can't live like this anymore."

'This review is over'

Blanche said in a separate appearance on ABC's "This Week" that though there are a "small number of documents" that the Justice Department is waiting for a judge's approval before it can release, when it comes to the department's own scouring of documents, "this review is over."

"We reviewed over six million pieces of paper, thousands of videos, tens of thousands of images," Blanche said.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday that he thinks the Department of Justice is complying with the law requiring public disclosure of the Epstein files.

But Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and co-sponsor of the law requiring the Justice Department to release its Epstein files, said he did not believe the department had fully complied. He said survivors are upset that many of their names accidentally had come out without redactions and they want to make sure the rest of the files come out.

Blanche said each time the department has learned that a victim's name was not properly redacted, it has moved quickly to fix the problem but that those mistakes account for a tiny fraction of the overall materials.

The AP is reviewing the documents released by the Justice Department in collaboration with journalists from Versant, CBS and NBC. Journalists from each newsroom are working together to examine the files and share information about what is in them. Each outlet is responsible for its own independent news coverage of the documents.

Top Justice Department official plays down chance for charges arising from Epstein files revelations

WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Justice Department official played down the possibility of additional criminal charges arising fr...

 

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