Trump, Kristi Noem
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Bernard Kerik, NYC police
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J. Thomas Manger, who took the top post on the force following the deadly Capitol riot, called out the president for sending a "chilling message" to officers.
Capitol police chief Thomas Manger has led — and then rebuilt — the department since the Jan. 6 riot. He speaks to CBS News ahead of his retirement on Friday.
The largest police union in the country has issued an endorsement of key provisions of the President Donald Trump-backed "big, beautiful" budget bill.National Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) President Patrick Yoes announced strong support for the bill on Wednesday evening,
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MASSAPEQUA, N.Y. (AP) — New York is discriminating against a school district that refuses to get rid of its Native American chief mascot and could face a Justice Department investigation or risk losing federal funding, President Donald Trump’s top education official said Friday.
Capitol Police Chief Thomas Manger blasted President Donald Trump's pardons of convicted Jan. 6 rioters ahead of his planned retirement. During a Wednesday report on CBS News, correspondent Scott MacFarlane explained that Manger was pulled out of retirement after the 2021 riot to help with "rebuilding an already understaffed force and beefing up
Police rally behind President Donald Trump's plan to end overtime taxes, citing benefits for law enforcement families and retention, as Republicans work to push the budget bill forward.
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Daily Express US on MSNEx-NYC Police Commissioner and Trump ally who served during 9/11 dead at 68Bernard Kerik was appointed by Rudy Giuliani to serve as police commissioner in 2000 and was in the position during the September 11 attacks. He later worked for the former NYC mayor during his efforts to overturn Trump's 2020 election loss.
The Department of Justice said it’s pulling back from policing changes. Will cities and states have the tools to enforce them?
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We’ve evolved from demanding justice to building the power to enforce it ourselves,” said Angela Angel, senior advisor at Black
The order accuses Rhode Island, Central Falls and Providence, among 500 other jurisdictions, of obstructing federal law.