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FBI arrests a Milwaukee judge accused of helping a man evade immigration authorities

FBI arrests a Milwaukee judge accused of helping a man evade immigration authorities
Supporters of Judge Hannah Dugan hold a rally in Milwaukee at the US Courthouse in Milwaukee on April 25, 2025. (Lee Matz/Milwaukee Independent via AP)
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Updated 26 April 2025

FBI arrests a Milwaukee judge accused of helping a man evade immigration authorities

FBI arrests a Milwaukee judge accused of helping a man evade immigration authorities
  • Judge Hannah Dugan is accused of escorting the man out of her courtroom through the jury door as immigration authorities were coming
  • Arrest comes amid growing battle between the Trump administration and the federal judiciary over deportations and other matters

MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin: The FBI on Friday arrested a Milwaukee judge accused of helping a man evade immigration authorities, escalating a clash between the Trump administration and local authorities over the Republican president’s sweeping immigration crackdown.
Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan is accused of escorting the man and his lawyer out of her courtroom through the jury door last week after learning that immigration authorities were seeking his arrest. The man was taken into custody outside the courthouse after agents chased him on foot.
President Donald Trump’s administration has accused state and local officials of interfering with his immigration enforcement priorities. The arrest also comes amid a growing battle between the administration and the federal judiciary over the president’s executive actions over deportations and other matters.

Dugan was taken into custody by the FBI on Friday morning on the courthouse grounds, according to US Marshals Service spokesperson Brady McCarron. She appeared briefly in federal court in Milwaukee later Friday before being released from custody. She faces charges of “concealing an individual to prevent his discovery and arrest” and obstructing or impeding a proceeding.
“Judge Dugan wholeheartedly regrets and protests her arrest. It was not made in the interest of public safety,” her attorney, Craig Mastantuono, said during the hearing. He declined to comment to an Associated Press reporter following her court appearance.
Democratic Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, in a statement on the arrest, accused the Trump administration of repeatedly using “dangerous rhetoric to attack and attempt to undermine our judiciary at every level.”
“I will continue to put my faith in our justice system as this situation plays out in the court of law,” he said.
Court papers suggest Dugan was alerted to the presence of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in the courthouse by her clerk, who was informed by an attorney that they appeared to be in the hallway.




Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan speaks during a rally marking the third anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2025, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Lee Matz/Milwaukee Independent via AP)

The FBI affidavit describes Dugan as “visibly angry” over the arrival of immigration agents in the courthouse and says that she pronounced the situation “absurd” before leaving the bench and retreating to her chambers. It says she and another judge later approached members of the arrest team inside the courthouse, displaying what witnesses described as a “confrontational, angry demeanor.”
After a back-and-forth with officers over the warrant for the man, Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, she demanded that the arrest team speak with the chief judge and led them away from the courtroom, the affidavit says.
After directing the arrest team to the chief judge’s office, investigators say, Dugan returned to the courtroom and was heard saying words to the effect of “wait, come with me” before ushering Flores-Ruiz and his lawyer through a jury door into a non-public area of the courthouse. The action was unusual, the affidavit says, because “only deputies, juries, court staff, and in-custody defendants being escorted by deputies used the back jury door. Defense attorneys and defendants who were not in custody never used the jury door.”
A sign that remained posted on Dugan’s courtroom door Friday advised that if any attorney or other court official “knows or believes that a person feels unsafe coming to the courthouse to courtroom 615,” they should notify the clerk and request an appearance via Zoom.




A sign is posted outside of county Judge Hannah Dugan's courtroom at the Milwaukee County courthouse on April 25, 2025. (AP Photo)

Flores-Ruiz, 30, was in Dugan’s court for a hearing after being charged with three counts of misdemeanor domestic battery. Confronted by a roommate for playing loud music on March 12, Flores-Ruiz allegedly fought with him in the kitchen and struck a woman who tried to break them up, according to the police affidavit in the case.
Another woman who tried to break up the fight and called police allegedly got elbowed in the arm by Flores-Ruiz.
Flores-Ruiz faces up to nine months in prison and a $10,000 fine on each count if convicted. His public defender, Alexander Kostal, did not immediately return a phone message Friday seeking comment.
A federal judge, the same one Dugan would appear before a day later, had ordered Thursday that Flores-Ruiz remain jailed pending trial. Flores-Ruiz had been in the US since reentering the country after he was deported in 2013, according to court documents.
Attorney General Pam Bondi said victims were sitting in the courtroom with state prosecutors when the judge helped him escape immigration arrest.
“The rule of law is very simple,” she said in a video posted on X. “It doesn’t matter what line of work you’re in. If you break the law, we will follow the facts and we will prosecute you.”
White House officials echoed the sentiment of no one being above the law.
Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat who represents Wisconsin, called the arrest of a sitting judge a “gravely serious and drastic move” that “threatens to breach” the separation of power between the executive and judicial branches.
Emilio De Torre, executive director of Milwaukee Turners, said during a protest Friday afternoon outside the federal courthouse that Dugan was a former board member for the local civic group who “was certainly trying to make sure that due process is not disrupted and that the sanctity of the courts is upheld.”
“Sending armed FBI and ICE agents into buildings like this will intimidate individuals showing up to court to pay fines, to deal with whatever court proceedings they may have,” De Torre added.
The case is similar to one brought during the first Trump administration against a Massachusetts judge, who was accused of helping a man sneak out a back door of a courthouse to evade a waiting immigration enforcement agent.
That prosecution sparked outrage from many in the legal community, who slammed the case as politically motivated. Prosecutors dropped the case against Newton District Judge Shelley Joseph in 2022 under the Democratic Biden administration after she agreed to refer herself to a state agency that investigates allegations of misconduct by members of the bench.
The Justice Department had previously signaled that it was going to crack down on local officials who thwart federal immigration efforts.
The department in January ordered prosecutors to investigate for potential criminal charges any state and local officials who obstruct or impede federal functions. As potential avenues for prosecution, a memo cited a conspiracy offense as well as a law prohibiting the harboring of people in the country illegally.
Dugan was elected in 2016 to the county court Branch 31. She also has served in the court’s probate and civil divisions, according to her judicial candidate biography.
Before being elected to public office, Dugan practiced at Legal Action of Wisconsin and the Legal Aid Society. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1981 with a bachelor of arts degree and earned her Juris Doctorate in 1987 from the school.


UN chief says world should not be intimidated by Israel

UN chief says world should not be intimidated by Israel
Updated 20 September 2025

UN chief says world should not be intimidated by Israel

UN chief says world should not be intimidated by Israel
  • The meeting of more than 140 heads of state and government, which paralyzes a corner of Manhattan for a week each year, will likely be dominated by the future of the Palestinians and the war in Gaza

UNITED NATIONS, United States: United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told AFP Friday the world should not be “intimidated” by Israel and its creeping annexation of the occupied West Bank.
In an interview at UN headquarters in New York, he also called for more ambitious climate action saying that efforts to limit global warming to 1.5 Celsius above pre-industrial levels were at risk of “collapsing.”
Guterres spoke to AFP ahead of the UN’s signature high-level week at which 10 countries will recognize a Palestinian state, according to France — over fierce Israeli objections.
The meeting of more than 140 heads of state and government, which paralyzes a corner of Manhattan for a week each year, will likely be dominated by the future of the Palestinians and the war in Gaza.
Israel has reportedly threatened to annex the West Bank if Western nations press ahead with the recognition plan at the UN gathering.
But Guterres said, “We should not feel intimidated by the risk of retaliation.”
“With or without doing what we are doing, these actions would go on and at least there is a chance to mobilize international community to put pressure for them not to happen,” he said.
“What we are witnessing in Gaza is horrendous,” Guterres said as Israel threatened “unprecedented force” in its ongoing assault on Gaza City.
“It is the worst level of death and destruction that I’ve seen my time as Secretary-General, probably my life and the suffering of the Palestinian people cannot be described — famine, total lack of effective health care, people living without adequate shelters in huge concentration areas,” he said.
Israel’s far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has called for annexation of swaths of the West Bank with an aim to “bury the idea of a Palestinian state” after several countries joined the French push on statehood.
But Israel’s staunch ally the United States has held back from any criticism of the war in Gaza or vows to annex the West Bank — and excoriated its allies who have vowed to recognize a Palestinian state.

- Climate goals face collapse -

Also on the agenda will be efforts to combat climate change which Guterres warned are floundering.
Guterres said efforts to cap climate warming at 1.5 Celsius above pre-industrial levels were in trouble.
The climate goals for 2035 of the countries that signed the Paris Agreement, also known as Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), were initially expected to be submitted several months ago.
However, uncertainties related to geopolitical tensions and trade rivalries have slowed the process.
“We are on the verge of this objective collapsing,” he told AFP.
“We absolutely need countries to come... with climate action plans that are fully aligned with 1.5 degrees (Celsius), that cover the whole of their economies and the whole of their greenhouse gas emissions,” he said.
“It is essential that we have a drastic reduction of emissions in the next few years if you want to keep the 1.5 degrees Celsius limit alive.”
Less than two months before COP30 climate meeting in Brazil, dozens of countries have been slow to announce their plans — particularly China and the European Union, powers considered pivotal for the future of climate diplomacy.
Efforts to combat the impact of man-made global warming have taken a backseat to myriad crises in recent years that have included the coronavirus pandemic and several wars, with Guterres seeking to reignite the issue.
The UN hopes that the climate summit co-chaired Wednesday in New York by Guterres and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will be an opportunity to breathe life into efforts ahead of COP30.
Guterres said he was concerned that Nationally Determined Contributions, or national climate action plans, may not ultimately support the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.
“It’s not a matter to panic. It’s a matter to be determined, to put all pressure for countries.”
Containing global warming to1.5C compared to the pre-industrial era 1850-1900 is the most ambitious goal of the 2015 Paris Agreement. But many scientists agree that this threshold will most likely be reached before the end of this decade, as the planet continues to burn more and more oil, gas, and coal.
The climate is already on average 1.4C warmer today, according to current estimates from the European observatory Copernicus.
 

 


Zelensky says Ukrainian forces inflict heavy losses on Russia in counteroffensive

Zelensky says Ukrainian forces inflict heavy losses on Russia in counteroffensive
Updated 20 September 2025

Zelensky says Ukrainian forces inflict heavy losses on Russia in counteroffensive

Zelensky says Ukrainian forces inflict heavy losses on Russia in counteroffensive
  • Zelensky said the counteroffensive had disrupted Russian plans in their longstanding objective of seizing the logistics center of Pokrovsk.

Ukrainian troops pressed on with a frontline counteroffensive around two cities in the east of the country on Friday, with President Volodymyr Zelensky saying heavy losses were being inflicted on Russian forces.
Russia said its forces had captured two new villages in their slow advance through Ukraine’s east and south, but its Defense Ministry made no reference to the Ukrainian drive near the towns of Pokrovsk and Dobropillia.
Zelensky, in his nightly video address, said the counteroffensive had disrupted Russian plans in their longstanding objective of seizing the logistics center of Pokrovsk.
“It was there that one of the most important directions of the Russian offensive was located, and they were unable to launch a full-fledged offensive there. Our military is destroying their forces,” Zelensky said.
“The Russians have suffered significant losses, and the ‘exchange fund’ for our country has been significantly replenished — every day more Russian prisoners are being taken.”
Ukraine’s top commander, Oleksandr Syrskyi, wrote on Telegram that his forces had advanced from three to seven km  through Russian defenses.
In his video address, Zelensky also said Ukrainian forces were holding their positions around Kupiansk — an area of Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region that has been subject to Russian assaults for months.
On Thursday, Zelensky said Ukrainian forces had recaptured seven settlements and 160 square km  around Pokrovsk and Dobropillia since the operation began. Another nine settlements had been “cleared” of enemy forces.
The Donetsk region, which is only partially occupied by Russia but which Moscow wants Kyiv to abandon before any peace settlement, remains the site of the most intense fighting.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said its forces had seized two more localities — Muravka, southwest of Pokrovsk, and Novoivanivka, further southwest in the Zaporizhzhia region.
The general staff of Ukraine’s military listed Muravka as one of several settlements where its forces had halted 87 attacks near Pokrovsk.
A senior official in the Russia-appointed administration in areas of the Donetsk region held by Moscow told Russia’s TASS news agency that Russian forces now had effective control of all roads and other logistics around Pokrovsk.
Reuters could not independently verify battlefield reports from either side.


A boat carrying migrants sinks off the Libyan coast with at least 19 people dead and 42 missing

A boat carrying migrants sinks off the Libyan coast with at least 19 people dead and 42 missing
Updated 20 September 2025

A boat carrying migrants sinks off the Libyan coast with at least 19 people dead and 42 missing

A boat carrying migrants sinks off the Libyan coast with at least 19 people dead and 42 missing
  • Libya has been a main transit point for migrants trying to reach Europe, fleeing war and poverty in Africa and the Middle East

CAIRO: The bodies of 19 people were recovered after the rubber migrant boat they were in sank off the eastern Libyan coast, the International Organization for Migration said Friday.
The boat, which was carrying more than 70 Sudanese and South Sudanese nationals, sailed on Sept. 9 from a beach near the town of Kambout and sank the same day, an IOM spokesperson told The Associated Press Friday.
A total of 14 people were rescued five days later, while 42 others remain missing, the IOM said. It was unclear how those rescued managed to survive at sea during that time.
Libya has been a main transit point for migrants trying to reach Europe, fleeing war and poverty in Africa and the Middle East.
The Libya Red Crescent said on its Facebook page on Monday that it received an emergency call from authorities in Tobruk, about 60 kilometers (37 miles) west of Kambout, about recovering dead bodies. The authorities and the Red Crescent often work together on rescue and recovery operations.
The Red Crescent said it recovered several bodies at Kambout beach. It didn’t say whether the bodies were those of the 19 migrants mentioned in the IOM report.
In a separate incident, authorities in the coastal city of Zuwara in western Libya said on Tuesday they rescued 35 migrants, including five women and a child. The migrants were on a boat off the coast of the Abu Kammash area, according to a statement by Zuwara Naval Operations Force, which is part of the internationally recognized Government of National Unity in the capital of Tripoli in the west.
Libya has been a main transit point for migrants fleeing war and poverty in Africa and the Middle East. Earlier this month, a migrant boat capsized off Libya’s coast, leaving one dead and 22 missing, another tragedy for those attempting the dangerous journey to Europe, Libyan authorities said.
The coast guard in Tobruk said at the time that the boat carried 32 migrants when it sailed and that nine were rescued.
Libya was plunged into chaos following a NATO-backed uprising that toppled and killed longtime autocrat Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.

 


Trump sees progress on TikTok, says will visit China

Trump sees progress on TikTok, says will visit China
Updated 20 September 2025

Trump sees progress on TikTok, says will visit China

Trump sees progress on TikTok, says will visit China

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump hailed Friday what he called progress with Chinese President Xi Jinping including on selling blockbuster app TikTok, and said he would visit the Asian power, which offered a more cautious assessment of their talks.
The leaders of the world’s two largest economies spoke by telephone for the second time since the return to the White House of Trump, who has tried to keep a lid on tensions despite his once virulent criticism of China.
The United States has forcefully sought to take out of Chinese hands TikTok, the social media platform hugely popular with young Americans that the Republican mogul has turned to himself to garner support.
Trump said that Xi “approved” the deal during the phone call but then said, “We have to get it signed.” China did not confirm any agreement.
“We’re going to have a very, very tight control,” Trump said. “There’s tremendous value with TikTok, and I’m a little prejudiced because I frankly did so well on it.”
He also said that Xi promised to work with the United States on ending the war in Ukraine, where China has offered crucial indirect support to Russia.
Trump earlier in a post on Truth Social said that he and Xi “made progress on many very important issues” including TikTok.
He said he would meet Xi on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum summit in South Korea starting at the end of next month and that he would travel to China next year.
Trump said Xi would also visit the United States at an unspecified time and that the two leaders would speak again by telephone.

China offered a sterner take on the talks.
“On the TikTok issue, Xi noted that China’s position is clear: the Chinese government respects the will of enterprises and welcomes them to conduct business negotiations based on market rules, to reach solutions that balance interests and comply with Chinese laws and regulations,” a statement said.
“China hopes the US side will provide an open, fair, and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese companies investing in the United States.”
It described the call as “frank and in-depth.”
The US Congress last year during Joe Biden’s presidency passed a law to force TikTok’s parent company ByteDance to sell its US operations for national security reasons or face the ban of the app.
US policymakers, including in Trump’s first term, have warned that China could use TikTok to mine data from Americans or exert influence on what they see on social media.
But Trump, an avid social media user, on Tuesday once again put off a ban of the app.
Investors reportedly being eyed to take over the app include Oracle, the tech firm owned by Larry Ellison, one of the world’s richest people.
Ellison is a supporter of Trump, meaning TikTok would be the latest media or social media app to come under the control or influence of the president.

Wendy Cutler, a former US trade official who is now senior vice president of the Asia Society Policy Institute, said that many details remained unclear including who would control the algorithm powering TikTok, and that many other irritants remained.
“Beijing is displaying a willingness to play hardball, and a need to get paid by Washington for any concessions it makes,” she said.
Trump while on the campaign trail bashed China relentlessly as an enemy but since returning to office has spoken of his strong relationship with Xi.
Both sides dramatically hiked tariffs against each other during a months-long dispute earlier this year, disrupting global supply chains.
Washington and Beijing reached a deal to reduce levies, which expires in November, with the United States imposing 30 percent duties on imports of Chinese goods and China hitting US products with a 10 percent tariff.
The phone talks come after Trump accused Xi of conspiring against the United States with a major military parade to mark the end of World War II that brought the leaders of Russia and North Korea.
The Chinese statement said Xi voiced appreciation to Trump for the US role in World War II.
 


Legislators questioning German emergency funding for PA salaries

Legislators questioning German emergency funding for PA salaries
Updated 19 September 2025

Legislators questioning German emergency funding for PA salaries

Legislators questioning German emergency funding for PA salaries
  • “The Authority is in an acute financial emergency,” a development ministry spokesperson told a regular government news conference on Friday, adding that the start of the school year had already been delayed for this reason

BERLIN: A €30 million ($35.24 million) one-time payment to the Palestinian Authority, which Germany had hoped to announce next week to coincide with European allies’ formal recognition of a Palestinian state, has been held up by skeptical legislators, Bild newspaper reported.
The payment is designed to ensure that salaries of teachers and healthcare workers can be paid at a time when Israel, which collects customs and import taxes on behalf of the Palestinian Authority that exercises limited self-rule in parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank, is withholding funds. The PA says Israel has withheld around $3 billion.
The German emergency payment was agreed by Development Minister Reem Alabali Radovan during a Middle East trip earlier this month and is supported by both conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz and his Social Democrat deputy, Lars Klingbeil.
But Alexander Hoffmann, a conservative legislator, told Bild that members of his powerful parliamentary budget committee had concerns about the payment, which they must approve.
“We need more clarity,” he told Bild. “Humanitarian aid is important, but it has to be clear what projects are being funded ... Projects that endanger Israel’s security have to be clearly excluded.”
Officials said the money was likely still to be paid once legislators’ concerns had been addressed.
The German government says the funds are needed for salaries because of the dire economic situation in the Palestinian Authority area since the start of the Gaza war.
“The Authority is in an acute financial emergency,” a development ministry spokesperson told a regular government news conference on Friday, adding that the start of the school year had already been delayed for this reason.
“We must make sure the money doesn’t end up in the wrong hands,” said Juergen Hardt, a senior conservative and Foreign Affairs Committee Member. 
“But once that’s done, there are very good reasons for this aid.”
European countries, including Britain and France, are expected to announce at the UN General Assembly that they are recognizing a state of Palestine.
Germany is not expected to do so, and is a strong supporter of Israel out of a sense of historic obligation.
But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s announcement of plans to militarily occupy Gaza, almost two years after the deadly Hamas incursion that sparked the conflict, has brought about a hardening of Berlin’s tone.
Merz said during a visit to Madrid on Thursday that Israel’s actions in Gaza were not proportionate to its stated goals and indicated German openness to backing EU sanctions against Israel.