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Kasparian says AOC used ‘Trump-like’ attacks in social media clash

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Left-wing commentator Ana Kasparian said this week on an episode of “The Young Turks” that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., responded to her social media criticism with personal attacks, following a public exchange on X centered on U.S. policy toward Israel and a reported plot targeting activist Nerdeen Kiswani. 

Kasparian framed the response as emblematic of a broader pattern, comparing it to rhetoric often associated with President Donald Trump.

“She did respond to me, and she demonstrated that she does have some Trump-like responses to members of the media who dare challenge her,” Kasparian said.

Kasparian pointed to a post Ocasio-Cortez published on X responding directly to her criticism, where the representative wrote that she had “never” supported the claim and accused Kasparian of lying for attention.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) speaking at a town hall in Queens

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (David Dee Delgado/Getty Images)

FEDERAL ELECTION COMPLAINT ALLEGES AOC MISUSED CAMPAIGN FUNDS FOR PSYCHIATRIST SERVICES

“I never have. Feel free to continue lying publicly, though. Those checks don’t cash themselves, and you aren’t talented enough to be relevant with the truth,” Ocasio-Cortez wrote.

The exchange began after Ocasio-Cortez issued a statement addressing a reported assassination plot, condemning the incident as political violence and confirming the suspect had been arrested.

“This is a reprehensible act of political violence. There is no place for it in our city nor our country,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “I am thankful Ms. Kiswani is safe and the assailant is under arrest.”

Kasparian said her reply to that post was intentionally sarcastic and aimed at highlighting what she described as inconsistencies in Ocasio-Cortez’s record on funding to Israel. 

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“You should vote to send Israel more money for weapons,” Kasparian wrote back on X.

Kasparian explained that her criticism stemmed from frustration with Ocasio-Cortez’s broader approach to foreign policy and Democratic Party politics, while addressing Ocasio-Cortez’s accusation that she misrepresented her voting record.

“I’m sick of AOC being incredibly weak on things that she shouldn’t be weak on,” Kasparian said. “If I found that I was wrong… that’s embarrassing, and I want to correct that mistake, but I didn’t make a mistake. She lied.”

Kasparian then cited a 2021 House vote on additional funding for Israel’s Iron Dome system as a key example shaping her view, arguing that pressure from Democratic leadership influenced the outcome of that vote.

“Originally, AOC was on the right side… she was going to vote no,” Kasparian said. “Nancy Pelosi… pressures her to change her vote, and guess what, AOC changed her vote from no to present.”

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaks with microphone

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., had a social media spat this week with a “Young Turks” host. (Sven Hoppe/picture alliance via Getty Images)

AOC ACCUSES ISRAEL OF GENOCIDE IN GERMANY WHERE HOLOCAUST WAS LAUNCHED, SPARKING OUTRAGE

Referencing footage from the House floor during the 2021 vote on additional Iron Dome funding, Kasparian described Ocasio-Cortez as visibly emotional after changing her vote from “no” to “present,” a move she argued reflected political pressure from Democratic leadership.

“She’s clearly very visibly upset… she later on confirms that she was in fact tearful and weeping,” Kasparian said.

Kasparian argued that the vote change, which came after initial opposition to the funding, undercut the significance of dissent within the Democratic caucus and reflected a broader willingness to yield to party leadership.

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“No one can force you to change your vote,” Kasparian said. “You changed your vote because you got a little bit of pressure, effectively making your vote useless because you voted present. To cave to the likes of Nancy Pelosi shows a devastating level of weakness.”



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What we know about the US fighter jet shot down in Iran | US-Israel war on Iran

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The White House has confirmed Donald Trump has been briefed on the shooting down of a US fighter jet in Iran. It comes as Iranian state TV announced a reward for anyone who captures the US pilots alive. US media reported one crew member has been rescued. Here’s what we know.



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Wicker, Shaheen press Trump admin on sanctioned Russian officials’ DC trip

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FIRST ON FOX: A bipartisan pair of top-ranking senators want to know why sanctioned Russian officials were in Washington, D.C., and given access to the Capitol and meetings with administration officials as wars in Iran and Ukraine rage on.

Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., the top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, raised counterintelligence concerns over the recent visit of a delegation of Russian Duma members, all of whom are sanctioned for “conduct deemed to be harmful to U.S. national security.”

“The delegation came onto U.S. soil for one purpose: to advance the Kremlin’s strategic aims — including gathering additional useful intelligence,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

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Split of Roger Wicker and Jeanne Shaheen

Sens. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Jeanne Shahenn, D-N.H., raised counterintelligence concerns with the recent visit of a delegation of Russian officials to Washington, D.C. (Alex Wong/Getty Images; Anna Rose Layden/Getty Images)

“They did not come to engage in dialogue or pursue democratic aims,” they continued.

The lawmakers argued that Duma members “include Kremlin subordinates who have committed numerous cyber and ransomware attacks on Americans and have facilitated war crimes against Ukrainian civilians.”

“Remarkably, they are now helping Iran target U.S. military and diplomatic personnel across the Middle East,” Wicker and Shaheen wrote.

SENATE TO QUESTION TRUMP INTEL LEADERS ON IRAN WAR AFTER TOP OFFICIAL QUITS IN PROTEST

Russian President Vladimir Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin listens to Moscow-appointed head of Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia region of Ukraine, Yevgeny Balitsky, during their meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Nov. 18, 2024. (Vyacheslav Prokofyev, Sputnik, Kremlin via AP)

Several members of the Russian Duma visited Washington, D.C., late last month on a trip organized by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla. She was joined by Reps. Eli Crane, R-Ariz., Derrick Van Orden, R-Wis., Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., and Vicente Gonzalez, D-Texas, for a meeting with the delegation.

Luna later gave them a tour of the Capitol after posing for photos outside the United States Institute of Peace.

“As representatives of the world’s two greatest nuclear superpowers, we owe our citizens open dialogue, the exchange of ideas, and open lines of communication,” Luna said on X following the meeting. “We will continue to foster this dialogue and push for peace in support of this [administration’s] efforts, as well as economic opportunity.”

GRAHAM SAYS RUSSIA SANCTIONS BILL ‘NEVER GOING BACK ON THE SHELF’ AFTER TRUMP BACKS PUSH

Wicker and Shaheen noted that the Duma members were “far from innocent participants in a cultural exchange.”

“It included Vyacheslav Nikonov, who in 2023 referred to the United States and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as the ‘Fourth Reich’ on Russian television. Mikhail Delyagin has advocated for destroying Ukraine’s energy sector. Boris Chernyshov once claimed that Russian retaliatory strikes were ‘an expression of our hatred [of Ukraine],’” they wrote.

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Wicker and Shaheen demanded that Rubio and Bessent explain why sanctions were waived for the Russian officials’ visit, what meetings the delegation had with Trump administration officials, what counterintelligence assessments were conducted on the visiting Russians, and provide a complete manifest of who traveled from the Russian Federation.

The lawmakers wrote that the delegation’s visit came “at a time when Russia’s intentions are unambiguously clear.”

“Numerous public reports have cited Russian support for Iran’s military targeting of American service members in the Middle East,” they wrote. “European intelligence agencies have reported that Russia intends to attack NATO member states in the coming years. And [Russian President Vladimir] Putin has made it clear that peace in Ukraine is a mirage. His singular ambition for Ukraine is to erase its existence.”



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Hims & Hers warns of data breach after Zendesk support ticket breach

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Hims and Hers pills

Telehealth giant Hims & Hers Health is warning that it suffered a data breach after support tickets were stolen from a third-party customer service platform.

Hims & Hers is an American telehealth company specializing in the direct-to-consumer healthcare space, providing subscription-based treatments for hair loss, ED, mental health, skincare, weight loss, and other conditions or needs.

It is one of the most successful U.S. brands in the online pharmacy and telehealth space, with strong marketing presence, and annual revenues close to $1 billion.

According to a sample of the notification shared with the authorities in California, the data breach occurred in early February 2026.

“On February 5, 2026, Hims & Hers, Inc. became aware of suspicious activity affecting our third-party customer service platform,” reads the letter sent to impacted individuals.

“We promptly took steps to secure our customer service platform and initiated an investigation into the nature and scope of the potential security incident.”

“The investigation determined that from February 4, 2026, to February 7, 2026, certain tickets sent to our customer service team were accessed or acquired without authorization.”

Following an internal investigation, the company determined, on March 3, that hackers had accessed support tickets that, in some cases, contained personal information.

The exposed information may include names, contact information, and other unspecified data, likely related to the support request submitted in each case.

The company underlined that no medical records or doctor communications were compromised in this incident.

While the company did not share further details, BleepingComputer learned last month that the ShinyHunters extortion gang conducted the breach.

The data was stolen as part of a widespread campaign in which threat actors compromised Okta SSO accounts to gain access to third-party cloud storage services and SaaS platforms to steal data.

In this particular attack, BleepingComputer was told that the threat actors used the Okta SSO account to access the His and Hers Zendesk instance, where they stole millions of support tickets.

The company is now offering 12 months of free credit monitoring services to all impacted individuals.

Customers are also encouraged to maintain heightened vigilance against unsolicited communications that may contain phishing or social-engineering lures. Also, they are advised to review account statements and monitor credit reports for suspicious activity.

BleepingComputer has reached out to the firm to request more information about the incident and how many customers have been impacted, but we have not heard back by publication time.

Two recent high-profile customer support security breaches that led to client data breaches are those of DIY store chain ManoMano in February and Crunchyroll in March. In both these cases, the compromised platform was Zendesk.

Automated pentesting proves the path exists. BAS proves whether your controls stop it. Most teams run one without the other.

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US unemployment rate drops despite economic uncertainty and Iran war | Business and Economy News

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Job growth in the United States rebounded in March despite the looming economic uncertainty pegged to tariffs and ongoing war on Iran.

Friday’s monthly job report from the US Bureau of Labour Statistics showed that the unemployment rate in March tumbled. Non-farm payrolls grew by 178,000 jobs, following a drop in February that was revised even further downward to 133,000 in lost jobs. The unemployment rate is currently at 4.3 percent.

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The biggest gains in March were in the healthcare sector, which added 76,000 jobs — higher than the 29,000 average monthly increase in the sector over the last year.

The gains, however, came after a large-scale nursing strike ended on February 24. That protest had taken more than 30,000 healthcare workers off of payrolls, helping to account for the rebound in March.

The construction sector had the second largest jump in employment, with 26,000 jobs added in March. Transportation and warehousing also grew with 21,000 jobs over the previous month, though the sector has lost 139,000 jobs overall since February 2025.

The federal government — the single largest employer in the US — continues to shrink, as President Donald Trump continues his push to address “waste, fraud and abuse”. It cut 18,000 federal employee positions in March, marking a 355,000 job decline from this time last year.

The White House, however, praised this month’s jobs report as evidence that Trump’s policies were stimulating the domestic economy.

“The March jobs report blew out expectations with strong construction job growth and a surge in manufacturing job creation as trillions of dollars in investments begin to materialize,” White House deputy press secretary Kush Desai wrote in a post on the social media platform X.

In his statement, Desai brushed aside concerns about the economic instability during the Iran war, dubbed Operation Epic Fury, which has sent prices for fuel and fertiliser surging higher.

“America remains on a solid economic trajectory thanks to President Trump’s proven agenda of tax cuts, deregulation, tariffs, and energy dominance,” he said.

“Americans can rest assured that after the short-term disruptions of Operation Epic Fury are behind us, America’s economic resurgence is set to only accelerate.”

However, experts say that the impact of the US conflict with Iran is not yet reflected in the country’s job numbers.

Economists at the banking firm JPMorgan cautioned that “negative payroll readings in any given month will become more common”, adding that “even with job growth sufficient to stabilize the unemployment rate, there could be negative payroll readings at least a third of the time”.

Angela Hanks, the chief of policy programmes at the think tank The Century Foundation, echoed that assessment in a statement to Al Jazeera.

”The topline rate does not yet reflect the war’s impact on the job market,” she said. “Wage growth has stalled, and oil prices are skyrocketing, resulting in higher prices for consumers and threatening to weaken the job market.”

US consumers are feeling the pinch in other areas. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey, which tracks economic optimism, dropped by 6 percent in March to hit its lowest level since December 2025.

Restricted traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, as a result of the conflict, has also been reflected in the uptick in gas prices.

The average price for a gallon of petrol is $4.09 ($1.08 per litre), up from $3.10 ($0.82 per litre) this time a month ago, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA), which tracks petrol prices nationwide.



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Alito treated at hospital in previously undisclosed March 20 incident

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Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito was treated for dehydration at a hospital after a previously undisclosed March 20 incident in Philadelphia, sources told Fox News. 

He was not admitted and returned home the same night without complications.

Alito, 76, attended a Federalist Society dinner that evening and reported feeling lightheaded, prompting his security detail to recommend a precautionary hospital visit. Sources said the justice has had no issues since.

United States Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel Alito.

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito was treated for dehydration at a hospital after a previously undisclosed March 20 incident in Philadelphia, sources told Fox News.  (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

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This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. 



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China-Linked TA416 Targets European Governments with PlugX and OAuth-Based Phishing

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A China-aligned threat actor has set its sights on European government and diplomatic organizations since mid-2025, following a two-year period of minimal targeting in the region.

The campaign has been attributed to TA416, a cluster of activity that overlaps with DarkPeony, RedDelta, Red Lich, SmugX, UNC6384, and Vertigo Panda.

“This TA416 activity included multiple waves of web bug and malware delivery campaigns against diplomatic missions to the European Union and NATO across a range of European countries,” Proofpoint researchers Mark Kelly and Georgi Mladenov said.

“Throughout this period, TA416 regularly altered its infection chain, including abusing Cloudflare Turnstile challenge pages, abusing OAuth redirects, and using C# project files, as well as frequently updating its custom PlugX payload.”

TA416 has also been observed orchestrating multiple campaigns aimed at diplomatic and government entities in the Middle East following the outbreak of the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict in late February 2026. The effort is likely an attempt to gather regional intelligence pertaining to the conflict, the enterprise security company added.

It’s worth mentioning here that TA416 also shares historical technical overlaps with another cluster known as Mustang Panda (aka CerenaKeeper, Red Ishtar, and UNK_SteadySplit). The two activity groups are collectively tracked under the monikers Earth Preta, Hive0154, HoneyMyte, Stately Taurus, Temp.HEX, and Twill Typhoon. 

While TA416’s attacks are characterized by the use of bespoke PlugX variants, the Mustang Panda cluster has repeatedly deployed tools like TONESHELL, PUBLOAD, and COOLCLIENT in recent attacks. What’s common to both of them is the use of DLL side-loading to launch the malware.

TA416’s renewed focus on European entities is driven a mix of web bug and malware delivery campaigns, with the threat actors using freemail sender accounts to conduct reconnaissance and deploy the PlugX backdoor via malicious archives hosted on Microsoft Azure Blob Storage, Google Drive, domains under their control, and compromised SharePoint instances. The PlugX malware campaigns were previously documented by StrikeReady and Arctic Wolf in October 2025.

“A web bug (or tracking pixel) is a tiny invisible object embedded in an email that triggers an HTTP request to a remote server when opened, revealing the recipient’s IP address, user agent, and time of access, allowing the threat actor to assess whether the email was opened by the intended target,” Proofpoint said.

Attacks carried out by TA416 in December 2025 have been found to leverage third-party Microsoft Entra ID cloud applications to initiate redirects that lead to the download of malicious archives. Phishing emails used as part of this attack wave contain a link to Microsoft’s legitimate OAuth authorization endpoint that, when clicked, redirects the user to the attacker-controlled domain and ultimately deploys PlugX.

The use of this technique has not escaped Microsoft’s notice, which last month warned of phishing campaigns targeting government and public-sector organizations that employ OAuth URL redirection mechanisms to bypass conventional phishing defenses implemented in email and browsers.

Further refinements to the attack chain were observed in February 2026, when TA416 began linking to archives hosted on Google Drive or a compromised SharePoint instance. The downloaded archives, in this case, include a legitimate Microsoft MSBuild executable and a malicious C# project file.

“When the MSBuild executable is run, it searches the current directory for a project file and automatically builds it,” the researchers said. “In the observed TA416 activity, the CSPROJ file acts as a downloader, decoding three Base64-encoded URLs to fetch a DLL side-loading triad from a TA416-controlled domain, saving them to the user’s temp directory, and executing a legitimate executable to load PlugX via the group’s typical DLL side-loading chain.”

The PlugX malware remains a consistent presence throughout TA416’s intrusions, although the legitimate, signed executables abused for DLL side-loading have varied over time. The backdoor is also known to establish an encrypted communication channel with its command-and-control (C2) server, but not before performing anti-analysis checks to sidestep detection.

PlugX accepts five different commands –

  • 0x00000002, to capture system information
  • 0x00001005, to uninstall the malware
  • 0x00001007, to adjust beaconing interval and timeout parameter
  • 0x00003004, to download a new payload (EXE, DLL, or DAT) and execute it
  • 0x00007002, to open a reverse command shell

“TA416’s shift back to European government targeting in mid-2025, following two years of focus on Southeast Asia and Mongolia, is consistent with a renewed intelligence-collection focus against EU and NATO-affiliated diplomacy entities,” Proofpoint said.

“In addition, TA416’s expansion to Middle Eastern government targeting in March 2026 further highlights how the group’s tasking prioritization is likely influenced by geopolitical flashpoints and escalations. Throughout this period, the group has shown a willingness to iterate on infection chains, cycling through using fake Cloudflare Turnstile pages, OAuth redirect abuse, and MSBuild-based delivery, while continuing to update its customized PlugX backdoor.”

The disclosure comes as Darktrace revealed that Chinese‑nexus cyber operations have evolved from strategically-aligned activity in the 2010s to highly adaptive, identity-centric intrusions with an intent to establish long-term persistence within critical infrastructure networks.

Based on a review of attack campaigns between July 2022 and September 2025, U.S.-based organizations accounted for 22.5% of all global events, followed by Italy, Spain, Germany, Thailand, the U.K., Panama, Colombia, the Philippines, and Hong Kong. A majority of cases (63%) involved the exploitation of internet-facing infrastructure (e.g., CVE-2025-31324 and CVE-2025-0994) to obtain initial access.

“In one notable case, the actor had fully compromised the environment and established persistence, only to resurface in the environment more than 600 days after,” Darktrace said. “The operational pause underscores both the depth of the intrusion and the actor’s long‑term strategic intent.”



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Cambodia parliament approves law to combat cybercrime scam rings | News

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Justice Minister Keut Rith says the law aimed to enhance the “cleaning operation” across the country.

Cambodia’s National Assembly has approved its first law targeting scam centres accused of defrauding foreigners of billions of dollars amid rising pressure to curb these illicit operations.

Justice Minister Keut Rith on Friday said the law aimed to enhance the “cleaning operation” taking ⁠place across the country and ensure the centres do not return after the crackdown.

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“This law is strict like the fishing net, strict to ensure we don’t have the ⁠online scams any more in Cambodia, strict in order to serve the interests of the Cambodian nation and people,” he told reporters, adding that the problem had impacted the economy, tourism and investment.

The passage of the legislation aimed to “send a message to cyberscammers that Cambodia is not a place to do scams”, he said. The legislation will now go to Cambodia’s king for a final signature.

The law lays out punishments of two to five ‌years in prison and fines of up to $125,000 for those convicted of online scams.

Sentences for those convicted of scams conducted by gangs or against many victims can be up to 10 years in prison and as much as $250,000 in fines. It also outlines penalties for those convicted of money laundering, gathering victims’ data or recruiting scammers.

Ringleaders of cyberscam centres that engage in human trafficking, detentions and torture will now face prison sentences of up to 20 years and a fine of up to $500,000 under the law.

Cambodia has not previously had legislation specifically targeting scams although suspects have been charged with offences like recruitment for exploitation, aggravated ⁠fraud and money laundering.

The passage of the law comes after widespread condemnation from rights groups and ⁠sanctions and indictments by governments around the world as Cambodia is among the countries accused of being hotbeds of cyberscams.

On Thursday, Britain sanctioned the operators of what it described as the largest fraud complex in Cambodia and an online cryptocurrency ⁠marketplace used to trade stolen personal data. The complex is part of what the British government called a fast-growing network of scam centres in Southeast Asia where workers ⁠are confined in guarded compounds and forced to commit online ⁠fraud.

The US Department of State said last year that “official complicity, including at senior levels, inhibited effective law enforcement action against trafficking crimes” in Cambodia, which has denied suggestions its government is complicit.

A joint statement by United Nations experts in May said “hundreds of thousands of people of various nationalities are trapped and forced to carry out online fraud”.

Several countries have enacted anti-cyberscam laws to combat the rise of online fraud, romance and cryptocurrency scams with con artists in Singapore facing 24 strokes of the cane in serious cases.



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ActBlue accused of misleading Congress as internal memos raise foreign donation concerns

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ActBlue, a central piece of the Democratic Party’s fundraising infrastructure, potentially misled Congress when it said it was adequately vetting incoming donations, according to a new report released this week.

The head of ActBlue, a major nonprofit fundraising platform that helps steer donations to left-wing candidates and causes, wrote in 2023 to Congress — in response to concerns about the platform’s ability to vet foreign donors — that it was taking all the necessary steps to ensure it was following the rules to ensure money from foreign sources were not making it through, according to a Thursday report from The New York Times. 

However, behind the scenes, ActBlue’s attorneys at Covington & Burling were expressing grave concerns that ActBlue CEO Regina Wallace-Jones’ claims in her letter to Congress were misleading and could open up the platform to significant legal risk, the report said.

ActBlue was already facing scrutiny from Trump, with him calling on the Justice Department last year to investigate the group over concerns the platform was allowing straw and foreign donations, which are barred by federal election laws. The fundraising platform has also been targeted by several congressional probes led by Republican House Committees.

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ActBlue fundraising office

Employees work at ActBlue in Somerville, Mass. (Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

The concern from ActBlue’s legal counsel was found by the Times after reviewing memos between ActBlue and its legal counsel, resignation letters, and other communications. The Times also held interviews with ActBlue employees on the basis of anonymity. 

The memos reportedly communicated that claims to Congress by Wallace-Jones, indicating that ActBlue had a multi-layered vetting framework and processed contributions with foreign mailing addresses only if the donor supplied a U.S. passport number, were not fully accurate. Wallace-Jones also reportedly wrote in her letter that ActBlue’s framework would contact donors to request their U.S. passport information in order to process donations and would return any money when they could not reach the donor. However, this was also reportedly not happening on a consistent basis, according to The Times’ reporting.

“It can be alleged that ActBlue accepted and/or facilitated the acceptance of foreign-national contributions into American elections,” one memo reportedly stated. “In addition, because ActBlue’s staff was aware that its system was not as robust as necessary, it could be alleged that these violations were ‘knowing and willful,’ a standard that both increases the penalties the F.E.C. might seek and gives the Justice Department jurisdiction for a potential criminal investigation.”

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“An aggressive prosecutor may view the November 2023 letter not just as a false statement but as an effort to conceal the foreign contributions,” ActBlue’s legal counsel wrote, The Times reported.

Democratic Party supporters

Supporters hold up signs at a campaign rally for Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., in Madison, Wis., on July 1, 2015. (Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The concerns about Wallace-Jones’ statements to Congress and what to do subsequently resulted in behind-the-scenes chaos at the political fundraising nonprofit, including a slew of departures at ActBlue that were reported publicly by The Times. Additionally, the relationship between ActBlue and its legal firm, Covington & Burling, which is known for representing some of the most high-profile political clients in the United States, was ultimately severed amid disagreements over whether Wallace-Jones’ claims in 2023 were the fault of the legal counsel,or ActBlue, according to the Times’ reporting on Thursday. 

“We have complete confidence in the legal advice our lawyers provided to ActBlue,” a Covington spokesperson told Fox News Digital. 

ActBlue did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment in time for publication. 

In May, ActBlue put out a press release informing people about “what’s really happening and what you need to know,” pertaining to the investigation into ActBlue’s vetting mechanisms. The press release called it a “myth” that the platform allows foreign nationals to illegally contribute donations.

Election calendar at an ActBlue fundraising office

An Election Countdown Calendar hangs at ActBlue in Somerville, Massachusetts. (Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

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“While ActBlue has always had strong measures in place that have successfully prevented illegal foreign donations, beginning in 2025 we have gone even further,” the press release states. “We now require that Americans living abroad be physically present in the United States to make a contribution on our platform, despite campaign finance laws allowing citizens to contribute to campaigns while living abroad.”

Trump called on the DOJ early in his term to return a report within 180 days to him about the status of its findings into ActBlue. However, according to The Times, that report has never been made public. The outlet added that three investigations by GOP-led House committees remain ongoing. 



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