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Entertainment

Pam Bondi Moved to Military Base After Alleged Threats

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Pam Bondi has the unenviable job of being Donald Trump’s Attorney General.

She is one of the key faces of the Epstein cover-up.

A lot of people are unhappy.

As such, Bondi has been transferred from her residence to a military base, for protection.

Pam Bondi before Congress on February 11, 2026.
Pam Bondi testifies before the House Judiciary Committee in the Rayburn House Office Building on February 11, 2026. (Photo Credit: Win McNamee/Getty Images)

A military base is generally more secure than any private home

The New York Times reports that Pam Bondi, Trump’s Attorney General, has quietly moved from a civilian residence to a DC military base.

The reason is that there are numerous threats against her life.

Some of the threats allegedly stem from drug cartels. This is fairly par for the course for an AG job.

Other threats are due to the massive attempt to shield Trump and his allies from their involvement with dead pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

That point of contention is more specific to Bondi.

According to the NYT, Bondi’s relocation took place within the past month.

This came after what remains of federal law enforcement informed her staff about the threats against her.

Public figures of many walks of life can face threats, sometimes for no reason at all.

(We write this mere days after a delusional individual shot up Rihanna’s home, apparently believing the billionaire singer to be the object of her torment.)

However, the mounting fascism within the federal government and other recent decisions by Trump have spurred greater backlash.

Pam Bondi in the White House on February 20, 2026.
Pam Bondi listens as Donald Trump speaks at a press briefing held at the White House on February 20, 2026. (Photo Credit: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Why the uptick in threats? Well …

In January, Donald Trump had Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro abducted from his home and transported to the United States, primarily on the grounds that no one could stop him from doing so.

This apparently prompted an uptick in the threats.

Presumably, the escalating ICE violence as they continue to terrorize American neighborhoods is also a factor.

Former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was in charge of ICE, not Bondi.

But as AG, Bondi is instrumental in shielding ICE goons from justice. She’s caught a lot of heat for that.

And Bondi is not the only one who has been relocated, the NYT reports, due to alleged threats.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, former Secretary Kristi Noem, and former Fox & Friends weekend host turned Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth have received the same treatment.

So, too, has white nationalist advisor to Trump, Stephen Miller.

Interestingly, Army secretary Daniel P. Driscoll and Navy secretary John Phelan were also moved to military installations.

In the latter case, his DC home burned last year, prompting his relocation.

Pam Bondi in March 2026.
Pam Bondi attends an event celebrating the 2025 MLS Cup Champions Inter Miami CF in the East Room of the White House on March 05, 2026. (Photo Credit: Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Please do not threaten government officials

We really wish that these folks, no matter their strong — and even justified — feelings, would stop issuing threats against government officials.

Among other things, it’s counter-productive. Governments seldom react well to threats like this. The higher that you go, the more likely that a threat is to backfire.

(Private institutions are another matter. In 2023, domestic terror threats against Target prompted the corporation to betray its LGBTQ+ customers, pulling entire product lines. Their shareholders have been paying the price ever since.)

There are many productive actions that people can take as we wait for the names of those Trump advisors relocated (and many others) to stand trial for their crimes.

Issuing threats isn’t one of them. They’ll just beef up their security and continue terrorizing America and other nations.

Be smart. Protect your neighbors. Vote wisely. Prepare for things to get worse. And look forward to Nuremberg 2.

Pam Bondi Moved to Military Base After Alleged Threats was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Alaska News Featured Juneau News juneau Juneau Local Juneau Local Ketchikan Local News Feeds Sitka Local Uncategorized

Alaska accuses crowdfunding websites of violating law, using charities’ names without their consent

By: James Brooks, Alaska Beacon

Wooden gavel with books in background.

The state of Alaska filed civil lawsuits Tuesday against six crowdfunding websites, accusing them of illegally soliciting donations for thousands of Alaska charities without consent.

In complaints filed at Anchorage Superior Court, the consumer protection unit of the Alaska Department of Law said GoFundMe, PayPal, Charity Navigator, Pledgling Technologies, JustGiving and Network For Good each violated the Alaska Charitable Solicitations Act thousands of times. 

That act, in place since 1993, requires state registration for anyone who seeks donations on behalf of a charity. 

The suits ask a judge to order the sites shut down the pages devoted to Alaska nonprofits and immediately disburse any donations to those nonprofits. It also asks for “separate civil penalties … of not less than $1,000 and not more than $25,000 per violation.”

According to the complaints, the six crowdfunding sites scraped IRS data to obtain the information of thousands of Alaska nonprofits, then set up donation pages for each of those nonprofits without their consent.

That scraping was part of a nationwide campaign that encompassed almost a million and a half federally registered organizations.

In some cases, the sites charged fees or encouraged “tips” to themselves during the donation process. In many cases, they poured donations into a third-party account and only released donations to charities who stepped forward to claim them, according to the complaints.

Attorney General-designee Stephen Cox said the state became aware of the issue after California reporters and state officials began investigating why GoFundMe created donation pages for 1.4 million nonprofits without their consent or knowledge.

GoFundMe later took down many of those pages, but other crowdfunding websites did not. On Tuesday morning, donation pages were still visible on Charity Navigator, one of the defendants named in the new Alaska lawsuits.

Earlier this week, almost two dozen state attorney generals sent a letter to GoFundMe, demanding answers to questions about its policies.

Alaska did not sign that letter, in part because officials here believed the response was too weak.

In a prepared statement, Cox said, “Alaska law is clear: if you’re going to raise money in a charity’s name, you must first get the charity’s consent. These lawsuits are about protecting donors, protecting nonprofits, and preserving the public trust that makes charitable giving possible.”

Laurie Wolf is President and CEO of the Foraker Group, which advises Alaska nonprofits and provides them with administrative support.

The Foraker Group has been issuing warnings about the issue for months, and Wolf filed an affidavit in support of the lawsuit, as did a representative of the Bethel Community Services Foundation and Bread Line Inc., which operates a food bank in Fairbanks.

By phone on Tuesday, Wolf said the issue is a matter of consent: “They are impersonating 1.2 million nonprofits across this country, they’re impersonating them without their consent or even their knowledge.”

She said the issue became particularly important last fall, when people across the United States and the world became aware of the devastation caused by ex-Typhoon Halong in Western Alaska.

Many people, not knowing local Alaska charities, simply donated via links they found on internet searches. Some of those donations may have never reached their intended recipients.

If a crowdfunding website operates independently of the charity it intends to benefit, it might interfere with the charity’s own fundraising, she explained.

Someone might never be recognized for their gift and become angry, hurting the charity’s long-term relationship with their community.

“They take away the ability for the organization to make choices for itself about how it wants to build trust and relationships with its donors, and how it wants to put its brand and its mission out in the public sphere. They’ve taken away all of our choices about that,” she said.

In addition, donations may be subject to fees or never reach a charity at all, particularly if the charity is unaware that a crowdfunding website is holding money for it to collect.

The Foraker Group went so far as to conduct an experiment and had an employee donate to the group through several of the defendants’ platforms. In multiple cases, it took weeks before the donation reached its intended recipient, and in some cases, the donor’s identity was concealed, making it impossible for the charity to properly thank them.

GoFundMe was the only defendant to respond to emailed inquiries before the Beacon’s reporting deadline on Tuesday.

“GoFundMe’s mission is to help people help each other by making it easier for donors to discover and support the causes they care about. We are committed to helping nonprofits reach new supporters by connecting them with the millions of people on our platform who want to make a difference. Nonprofit Pages were created using publicly available information to help people support nonprofit organizations, with donations going to the intended nonprofit,” said Jeff Platt, communications manager for GoFundMe. 

“After hearing feedback from nonprofit leaders in October, we acted quickly to make Nonprofit Pages fully opt-in, removed and de-indexed unclaimed pages, and turned off search engine optimization by default. The immediate changes we made directly addressed the concerns of the nonprofit community, and reflect our continued commitment to transparency, accountability, and partnership with the nonprofit sector,” he said.

This week’s lawsuits in state court rely in large part on the 1993 Alaska Charitable Solicitations Act

That bill passed the Alaska Legislature amid a surge of concern about telemarketers soliciting donations by phone. 

Then-Rep. Ron Larson, a Democrat from the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, sponsored the act and told fellow lawmakers at the time that “lookalike organizations” were “ripping off” legitimate charities.

The act made no mention of donations by internet, and in state law, it’s still labeled as “Telephonic solicitations,” but it goes on to state that under any circumstances it is unlawful to use a charity’s name or symbol without their permission.

“Alaskans are generous people. But generosity depends on trust,” Cox said in his prepared statements. “GoFundMe and similar platforms used nonprofits’ good names to solicit donations without coordinating with the organizations actually doing the charitable work. That means some Alaskans may have donated thinking they were supporting a specific charity, when the charity never authorized the page and may never have received the donation — or may have received less than donors intended because of fees.”

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Uncategorized

Patriots and loyalists both rallied around St. Patrick’s Day during the Revolutionary War

At the end of a bitter winter at Valley Forge, George Washington ordered an extra glass of grog on St. Patrick’s Day for every man, ‘and thus all made merry and were good friends.’ iStock/Getty Images Plus

The Continental Army’s winter encampment at Valley Forge, between December 1777 and June 1778, is the stuff of legend. Chased out of Philadelphia by the British Army, George Washington and over 12,000 American troops retreated to Valley Forge, where they spent six long months harried by hunger, disease and the bitter cold.

In this context of frayed nerves and short tempers, a scuffle arose when some of the native-born soldiers antagonized the Irish recruits by dragging an effigy of a “stuffed Paddy” through camp on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17, 1778. The Irish, outraged at the sight of their patron saint being mocked, rose up to meet the challenge with their fists.

But George Washington quickly responded by claiming, “I, too, am a lover of St. Patrick’s Day.” He ordered an extra glass of grog for every man, “and thus all made merry and were good friends.”

By the late 1770s, people had been commemorating the anniversary of St. Patrick’s death – reputedly on March 17, 461 – for over a thousand years. Irish immigrants brought the tradition with them when they moved to North America, and officers in the Continental Army regularly used the holiday to bring glimmers of cheer to their cold and gloomy camps.

An antique letter, in old-fashioned script, in which George Washington grants Saint Patrick's Day as a holiday to the troops.
A section of George Washington’s general order of March 16, 1780, granting St. Patrick’s Day as a holiday for the troops.
National Archives

‘Till the nation is free’

In Morristown, New Jersey, in 1780, for example, Col. Francis Johnston insisted that “the celebration of (St. Patrick’s) Day should not pass by without having a little rum issued to the troops,” and he bought a small barrel to prove it. Accounts of the party were published in local newspapers.

“The whole army celebrated the day with that decorum which is characteristic of them, and which evidenced their attachment and unfeigned regard to the valiant Irish nation,” said an eyewitness. The soldiers’ dual loyalties to Ireland and America were reflected in the toasts they drank that day.

Cheers were raised for George Washington and “the American army,” but also for Irish patriots such as Henry Grattan and Henry Flood. “May the field pieces of Ireland bellow,” proclaimed one soldier, “till the nation is free.”

As the author of a forthcoming book on the global history of St. Patrick’s Day, the wartime popularity of St. Patrick’s Day does not strike me as surprising. Irish immigrants made up a sizable fraction of George Washington’s Continental Army during the American Revolution, partly because the war came on the heels of the first wave of modern mass migration from Ireland, which lasted from the early 1720s to the mid-1770s.

As a result, Irish newcomers, especially Presbyterians from Ulster, were overrepresented in the Middle Colonies of Pennsylvania, Delaware, New York and New Jersey when the war broke out. Their disproportionate enlistment accounts for the fact that Pennsylvania’s collection of infantry regiments and companies was nicknamed the “Line of Ireland” during the conflict.

Yet focusing on Irish patriots tells only half the story of what St. Patrick’s Day meant during the Revolutionary War era.

Plenty of Irishmen served as British redcoats throughout the war too.

‘Naturally gallant and loyal’

On March 17, 1779, 2½ years after capturing New York, the British army published a recruiting advertisement in the city’s Royal Gazette newspaper.

A gray-haired man in an 18th-century military jacket.
Francis Rawdon, a British army officer in his mid-20s, organized the Volunteers of Ireland regiment in New York in 1779.
Hulton Archive/Getty Images

“All Gentlemen Natives of Ireland are invited to join the Volunteers of Ireland, commanded by their Countryman, Lord Rawdon,” the ad announced. Francis Rawdon, the scion of a wealthy Anglo-Irish Protestant family from County Down in the north of Ireland, was a dynamic army officer in his mid-20s and the perfect figurehead for this new regiment.

Later that evening, these Irish loyalists celebrated St. Patrick’s Day “with their accustomed Hilarity,” noted a local journalist. Lord Rawdon’s Volunteers of Ireland regiment led the way with a parade, followed by a banquet.

“The soldierly Appearance of the men, their Order of March, Hand in Hand, being all NATIVES OF IRELAND, had a striking effect,” gushed the New-York Gazette. Being “naturally gallant and loyal,” the Irish will always “crowd with Ardour to stand forth in the Cause of their King, of their Country, and of real, honest, general Liberty.”

To be Irish in New York in 1779 meant being loyal to the crown. But when the British evacuated New York four years later, they took their red coats – and their loyalist St. Patrick’s Days – with them.

Irish America’s many stories

In time, memories of these pro-British parades and banquets proved unseemly in the fledgling republic. They were subsequently written out of most histories of Irish America. The official website of the world-famous Manhattan St. Patrick’s Day parade, for example, makes no mention of these loyalist processions.

Yet taking a closer look at these forgotten chapters of history is important because it reminds us that there has always been a debate over what it means to truly “be Irish” in America.

In the 1770s, it was a conflict over loyalty to the crown. Today, it can mean disagreements about abortion, gun control or immigrants’ rights.

The truth lies buried in the many stories of Irish America.

The Conversation

Cian T. McMahon received funding for this project through a Hibernian Research Award from the Center for the Study of American Catholicism (CUSHWA).

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Featured Juneau News juneau Juneau Local Juneau Local News Feeds

Juneau School District names Shawn Arnold as superintendent

NOTN- The Juneau School Board has selected Shawn Arnold as the next superintendent of the Juneau School District, according to an announcement.

Arnold currently serves as principal of Thunder Mountain Middle School and previously led Thunder Mountain High School. He has also worked as the district’s director of student services.

Before coming to Juneau in 2021, Arnold served as superintendent of both the Valdez City School District and Nome Public Schools.

In a statement, Arnold said he was honored to be chosen for the role.

“Juneau is my home, and I care deeply about this community, our students and the staff who serve them every day,” Arnold said. “Together, we will focus on supporting our staff, strengthening relationships and ensuring that Juneau’s schools remain a source of pride in our community.”

The selection follows a three-month search process led by the Juneau School Board with assistance from national recruiting firm McPherson and Jacobson. The process included community surveys, meetings with stakeholders and public candidate forums.

Arnold was selected from a group of finalists that also included Dr. Carlee Simon and Kevin Shipley.

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Entertainment

How Long Is Cooked Ground Beef Safe To Eat?

How long is your cooked ground beef good for? We break down key food safety facts for storing, freezing, and reheating your leftover cooked ground beef.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

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Alaska News

Alaska accuses crowdfunding websites of violating law, using charities’ names without their consent

(Photo by Krisanapong Detraphiphat/Getty Images)

(Photo by Krisanapong Detraphiphat/Getty Images)

The state of Alaska filed civil lawsuits Tuesday against six crowdfunding websites, accusing them of illegally soliciting donations for thousands of Alaska charities without consent.

In complaints filed at Anchorage Superior Court, the consumer protection unit of the Alaska Department of Law said GoFundMe, PayPal, Charity Navigator, Pledgling Technologies, JustGiving and Network For Good each violated the Alaska Charitable Solicitations Act thousands of times. 

That act, in place since 1993, requires state registration for anyone who seeks donations on behalf of a charity. 

The suits ask a judge to order the sites shut down the pages devoted to Alaska nonprofits and immediately disburse any donations to those nonprofits. It also asks for “separate civil penalties … of not less than $1,000 and not more than $25,000 per violation.”

According to the complaints, the six crowdfunding sites scraped IRS data to obtain the information of thousands of Alaska nonprofits, then set up donation pages for each of those nonprofits without their consent.

That scraping was part of a nationwide campaign that encompassed almost a million and a half federally registered organizations.

In some cases, the sites charged fees or encouraged “tips” to themselves during the donation process. In many cases, they poured donations into a third-party account and only released donations to charities who stepped forward to claim them, according to the complaints.

Attorney General-designee Stephen Cox said the state became aware of the issue after California reporters and state officials began investigating why GoFundMe created donation pages for 1.4 million nonprofits without their consent or knowledge.

GoFundMe later took down many of those pages, but other crowdfunding websites did not. On Tuesday morning, donation pages were still visible on Charity Navigator, one of the defendants named in the new Alaska lawsuits.

Earlier this week, almost two dozen state attorney generals sent a letter to GoFundMe, demanding answers to questions about its policies.

Alaska did not sign that letter, in part because officials here believed the response was too weak.

In a prepared statement, Cox said, “Alaska law is clear: if you’re going to raise money in a charity’s name, you must first get the charity’s consent. These lawsuits are about protecting donors, protecting nonprofits, and preserving the public trust that makes charitable giving possible.”

Laurie Wolf is President and CEO of the Foraker Group, which advises Alaska nonprofits and provides them with administrative support.

The Foraker Group has been issuing warnings about the issue for months, and Wolf filed an affidavit in support of the lawsuit, as did a representative of the Bethel Community Services Foundation and Bread Line Inc., which operates a food bank in Fairbanks.

By phone on Tuesday, Wolf said the issue is a matter of consent: “They are impersonating 1.2 million nonprofits across this country, they’re impersonating them without their consent or even their knowledge.”

She said the issue became particularly important last fall, when people across the United States and the world became aware of the devastation caused by ex-Typhoon Halong in Western Alaska.

Many people, not knowing local Alaska charities, simply donated via links they found on internet searches. Some of those donations may have never reached their intended recipients.

If a crowdfunding website operates independently of the charity it intends to benefit, it might interfere with the charity’s own fundraising, she explained.

Someone might never be recognized for their gift and become angry, hurting the charity’s long-term relationship with their community.

“They take away the ability for the organization to make choices for itself about how it wants to build trust and relationships with its donors, and how it wants to put its brand and its mission out in the public sphere. They’ve taken away all of our choices about that,” she said.

In addition, donations may be subject to fees or never reach a charity at all, particularly if the charity is unaware that a crowdfunding website is holding money for it to collect.

The Foraker Group went so far as to conduct an experiment and had an employee donate to the group through several of the defendants’ platforms. In multiple cases, it took weeks before the donation reached its intended recipient, and in some cases, the donor’s identity was concealed, making it impossible for the charity to properly thank them.

GoFundMe was the only defendant to respond to emailed inquiries before the Beacon’s reporting deadline on Tuesday.

“GoFundMe’s mission is to help people help each other by making it easier for donors to discover and support the causes they care about. We are committed to helping nonprofits reach new supporters by connecting them with the millions of people on our platform who want to make a difference. Nonprofit Pages were created using publicly available information to help people support nonprofit organizations, with donations going to the intended nonprofit,” said Jeff Platt, communications manager for GoFundMe. 

“After hearing feedback from nonprofit leaders in October, we acted quickly to make Nonprofit Pages fully opt-in, removed and de-indexed unclaimed pages, and turned off search engine optimization by default. The immediate changes we made directly addressed the concerns of the nonprofit community, and reflect our continued commitment to transparency, accountability, and partnership with the nonprofit sector,” he said.

This week’s lawsuits in state court rely in large part on the 1993 Alaska Charitable Solicitations Act

That bill passed the Alaska Legislature amid a surge of concern about telemarketers soliciting donations by phone. 

Then-Rep. Ron Larson, a Democrat from the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, sponsored the act and told fellow lawmakers at the time that “lookalike organizations” were “ripping off” legitimate charities.

The act made no mention of donations by internet, and in state law, it’s still labeled as “Telephonic solicitations,” but it goes on to state that under any circumstances it is unlawful to use a charity’s name or symbol without their permission.

“Alaskans are generous people. But generosity depends on trust,” Cox said in his prepared statements. “GoFundMe and similar platforms used nonprofits’ good names to solicit donations without coordinating with the organizations actually doing the charitable work. That means some Alaskans may have donated thinking they were supporting a specific charity, when the charity never authorized the page and may never have received the donation — or may have received less than donors intended because of fees.”

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Entertainment

Jace Evans Was Institutionalized After Pulling Gun on Grandma, Source Claims

Reading Time: 3 minutes

As we previously reported, Jenelle Evans had son Jace committed to a mental hospital in North Carolina recently.

The troubled Teen Mom star made the decision from afar, as she still resides in Las Vegas.

Jace and Jenelle have had a strained (to put it mildly) relationship for years, but this was an extreme action.

And now, we have new information about what may have led Jenelle to have her son committed.

Jace Evans and Jenelle Evans
Jenelle Evans has a very poor relationship with son Jace. (Instagram)

According to a new report from TMZ, Jace “pulled a gun” on his grandmother and temporary guardian Barbara Evans.

But several people — including Jenelle’s estranged sister, Ashleigh — have disputed that claim.

The Ashley’s Reality Roundup is reporting that the story about Jace pulling a gun was sold to TMZ by an anonymous source.

Ashleigh believes that that source was none other than Jenelle. But thus far, she has yet to furnish any evidence of that claim.

Jenelle Evans does not look happy in this picture from her 'Teen Mom' days.
Jenelle Evans does not look happy in this picture from her Teen Mom days. (MTV)

Whatever the case, after Jenelle called the cops, Jace was taken to a nearby hospital for an assessment.

He was then transferred to a psychiatric care facility, where he remains as of this writing.

“My nephew did not pull a firearm out on [his] grandmother or himself. That is a lie,” Ashleigh wrote on X on Tuesday (via The Ashley).

“None of that [is] true… who[ever] keeps fabricating these lies is a sick person,” she continued, adding:

“The police also never found a gun in my mother’s house. That is a straight up lie.”

She later elaborated on the situation, writing, “[It’s] most likely my sister selling the story because she’s angry. She’s losing control.”

Jenelle Evans and her oldest son on Teen Mom.
Jenelle Evans and her oldest son, Jace Evans, on Teen Mom. (Image Credit: MTV)

An anonymous source has come forward to corroborate Ashleigh’s claims.

“He was really angry and damaged something in the house. The cops actually searched Barbara’s house and found no gun,” the source tells The Ashley.

The insider also refutes the claim that Barbara was “desperate” to have Jace committed.

“Quite the opposite actually,” the source says.

“Jenelle still has custody of Jace and continues to try to manipulate the situation, despite being in Vegas. She’s trying everything she can to get her way.”

Insiders have revealed that there have been some substance abuse issues, but nothing beyond what one would expect from a 16-year-old in a volatile situation.

They say the main issue is that Jace is upset that Jenelle is now back together with David Eason, her ex-husband who had previously been arrested for abusing Jace.

We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.

Jace Evans Was Institutionalized After Pulling Gun on Grandma, Source Claims was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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