Happy hump day, OnPolitics readers.
More on the two suspects accused of impersonating law enforcement agents: A federal magistrate Tuesday rejected prosecutors’ request to detain Arian Taherzadeh and Haider Ali, who were arrested last week for offering personal gifts, including rent-free apartments, to at least two members of the Secret Service.
The two allegedly posed as federal law enforcement agents to gain access to the agency, but U.S. Magistrate G. Michael Harvey questioned their ability to follow through on the lavish gifts.
Harvey also said there is no evidence that Taherzadeh, 40, and Ali, 35, tried to infiltrate the Secret Service or posed a risk to national security.
“There has been no showing that national security information has been compromised,” he ruled.
The suspects were scheduled for release Wednesday morning for proper placement in home confinement with family members. Assistant U.S. Attorney Joshua Rothstein said the government would possibly appeal Harvey’s ruling.
prosecutors had spun “the wildest conspiracy theories imaginable” by grossly exaggerating claims against their clients.
It’s Amy and Chelsey with today’s top stories out of Washington.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., is treading a thin line between the moderate and far right wings of his party in an attempt to climb the ladder to House speaker, a role currently occupied by political opponent and fellow representative from California, Democrat Nancy Pelosi.
killed a pedestrian.
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President Joe Biden called Russia’s attack on Ukraine a “genocide” on Tuesday while talking with reporters before heading back to the White House from Iowa.
The statement comes after Russian President Vladimir Putin said peace talks had reached a “dead end” and Russian troops will not leave Ukraine until the Kremlin’s goals are accomplished.
“It’s become clearer and clearer that Putin is trying to wipe out the idea of being Ukrainian,” Biden said.
Death count rises:Over 10,000 civilians have been killed in city of Mariupol since the beginning of the invasion in February, Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko said Monday. That number could reach more than 20,000 in Mariupol alone, according to Boychenko.
How do you prove genocide? Harold Hongju Koh, an international law professor at Yale Law School, told USA TODAY that in order to prove genocide, there has to be a high level of intent.
“The tricky part of it which is relevant to the President’s statement yesterday is if I kill one person, that’s homicide,” he said. “If I kill that person with the intent to destroy every person of that persons ethnic group, then it could be a part of genocide, but you don’t know.”
Leading the league: San Francisco Giants’ Alyssa Nakken becomes the first female coach on the field for a Major League Baseball game. Check out more coverage of this season from USA TODAY’s Sports team.– Amy and Chelsey
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