Home Blog Page 2646

US says Trump prefers diplomacy with Iran but warns he has military options

0
US says Trump prefers diplomacy with Iran but warns he has military options

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi (left) and US President Donald Trump. —Reuters/File
  • Trump has said Khamenei ‘should be very worried.’
  • US wants missiles, proxies, rights issues included.
  • Fears grow that failed talks could spark wider war.

The White House said on Thursday that diplomacy is President Donald Trump’s first choice for dealing with Iran and he will wait to see whether a deal can be struck at high-stakes talks, but also warned that he has military options at his disposal.

Final preparations were underway for Friday’s meeting in Oman amid heightened tensions as the US builds up forces in the Middle East, which Trump has called a massive “armada,” and regional players seek to avert what many fear could escalate into a wider war.

The talks were set to go ahead even though the two sides have had differences over the agenda, and that has increased doubts about the prospects for a deal. Trump has threatened to carry out strikes on Iran if an agreement cannot be reached.

The US previously said it wanted the discussions to include Iran’s missile arsenal and other issues, while Tehran has insisted on focusing exclusively on its disputed nuclear program. It was unclear whether that disagreement had been resolved.

“The president’s diplomacy is always his first option when it comes to dealing with countries all around the world, whether it’s our allies or our adversaries,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters when asked about the coming talks.

She reiterated Trump’s position that “zero nuclear capability is something he’s been very explicit about” in his demands for Iran.

“He wants to see if a deal can be struck,” Leavitt said. “And while these negotiations are taking place, I would remind the Iranian regime that the president has many options at his disposal, aside from diplomacy, as the commander in chief of the most powerful military in the history of the world.”

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi departed for Oman on Thursday. His spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said Tehran would engage “with authority and to reach a fair, mutually acceptable and dignified understanding on the nuclear issue.”

“We hope the American side will also participate in this process with responsibility, realism and seriousness,” Baghaei added.

Araqchi is expected to meet in Muscat with Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy, and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and adviser.

On the eve of the talks, Iran’s state-run Press TV said “one of the country’s most advanced long-range ballistic missile(s),” the Khorramshahr 4, has been deployed at one of the Revolutionary Guards’ underground missile sites. The missile has a range of 2,000 km (1,240 miles) and is capable of carrying a 1,500-kg (3,300-pound) warhead, it added.

The US has pressed Iran to accept a much more limited range for its missiles.

Mutual threats

Trump’s blunt warnings and Iran’s vows of counter-strikes have spurred regional governments’ efforts to calm the situation.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said his government was working hard to prevent US-Iran tensions from tipping the Middle East into a new conflict. He has spent years cultivating a close relationship with Trump while expanding Ankara’s diplomatic influence across the region.

Speaking to reporters on a return flight from a visit to Egypt, Erdogan added that talks at the level of the US and Iranian leadership would be helpful after lower-level nuclear negotiations due in Oman on Friday, according to a transcript of his comments shared by his office on Thursday.

Tensions ratcheted up this week amid uncertainty over the location and format for the talks, which will follow Tehran’s bloody crackdown on street protests last month.

Asked on Wednesday whether Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei should be worried, Trump told NBC News: “I would say he should be very worried. Yeah, he should be.”

After Trump spoke, US and Iranian officials said the two sides had agreed to shift the talks’ location to Muscat after initially accepting Istanbul.

At a press conference in Doha, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Thursday that “great concern” had been expressed about potential escalation in the conflict with Iran during his meetings with officials in a visit to the Gulf region. He urged Iran to end what he called aggression and help bring stability to the region.

Gulf Arab states fear that Iran will carry out its threat to target US bases on their territory if the United States attacks the Islamic Republic.

China, meanwhile, said it supported Iran’s legitimate right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy and opposed the “threat of force and sanction pressure.”

‘Bad things will happen’

Iran has said the talks must be confined to its long-running nuclear dispute with Western powers.

But US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Wednesday that talks would have to include the range of Iran’s ballistic missiles, its support for armed proxy groups around the Middle East and its treatment of its own people, besides nuclear issues. Iranian sources say the US is demanding Tehran limit the range of Iran’s missiles to 500 km (310 miles).

Tehran’s regional sway has been weakened by Israel’s attacks on its proxies – from Hamas in Gaza to Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and militias in Iraq – and by the ousting of Iran’s close ally, former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Iran says its nuclear activities are meant for peaceful, not military purposes, while the US and Israel have accused it of past efforts to develop nuclear weapons.

The US has sent thousands of troops to the Middle East, as well as an aircraft carrier, other warships, fighter jets, spy planes and air-refuelling tankers.

Trump has warned that “bad things” would probably happen if a deal could not be reached.

Luke Combs has to say no to Super Bowl concert: Emergency

0
Luke Combs has to say no to Super Bowl concert: Emergency

Luke Combs will no longer take the stage at EA Sports’ Madden Bowl concert ahead of the 2026 Super Bowl, with the country star stepping back at the last minute to prioritise his growing family.

EA Sports confirmed the change on Thursday, February 5, revealing that Combs had to remain at home as his family prepares to welcome a new baby. 

“Update: Luke has to hold it down at home with a new one on the way,” the organisation shared via its official Instagram account. 

“All love for Luke and his family — and we can’t wait to put on an unforgettable #MaddenBowl with @zachlanebryan leading an incredible night of music and football for the fans.”

The 35-year-old singer had been set to perform at the pre-Super Bowl event on Friday, February 6, alongside Zach Bryan, Teddy Swims, Stephen Wilson Jr., Gavin Adcock and LARussell. 

The concert takes place just days before the Super Bowl, which will see the New England Patriots face off against the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday, February 8.

Combs later addressed his absence directly, sharing a brief message with fans on his Instagram Stories. 

“So sorry to miss y’all at Madden Bowl, but family always comes first,” he wrote. “Have a great time.”

The decision comes as Combs and his wife, Nicole Combs, prepare for the arrival of their third child. 

The couple are already parents to sons Tex, 3, and Beau, 2. Nicole announced her pregnancy in September 2025, writing at the time, “Third time’s a charm. Baby #3 coming this winter.”

Luke and Nicole have been together since 2014 and married in 2020, steadily growing their family over the past few years. 

Despite his packed touring and recording schedule, Combs has often spoken about how much he values time at home. 

In August 2025, he told Us Weekly that some of his favourite moments were the quiet ones with his family, particularly simple outings with his sons. 

He said those experiences were hard to beat and reminded him why he enjoys stepping back from work to “just be dad for a bit.”

While family remains his top priority, Combs continues to balance parenthood with music. 

He has previously shared that his main goal as an artist is to make songs that connect with people on a real level, whether that means helping fans celebrate good times or reflect on their own stories. 

His live shows, he has said, are about letting go of everyday worries and feeling part of something bigger.

Combs has also hinted that new music is on the horizon, describing his recent work as the start of a fresh chapter. 

Referring to his single Back in the Saddle, he explained that it reflects the idea of picking up where you left off, with renewed energy and drive.

For now, though, the singer is firmly focused on home, choosing family over the spotlight as the Super Bowl weekend approaches.

Bob’s Discount Furniture closes flat in NYSE trading debut after pricing at $17 a share

0
Bob's Discount Furniture closes flat in NYSE trading debut after pricing at $17 a share

Shares of Bob’s Discount Furniture barely budged on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday after the company priced its initial public offering at $17 per share.

That price was within Bob’s expected range of $17 to $19 per share and valued the company at about $2.22 billion. The stock, trading on the NYSE under the ticker symbol BOBS, closed the day at $17.02, roughly flat.

The Manchester, Connecticut-based company, which was founded in 1991, has grown to 206 showrooms across 26 states, as of Sept. 28, according to its S-1 filing. It plans to more than double that store count to over 500 locations by 2035, the filing said.

In an interview with CNBC, CEO Bill Barton said that even in a slow housing market and during a time when consumers have hesitated to splurge on some big-ticket items, Bob’s has seen demand for buying furniture across all incomes.

“People still need furniture, but in challenging times they are often looking for good value and we are the value leader,” he said.

Many of its customers are motivated by life changes, such as setting up a new apartment, buying a home, having a child or downsizing for retirement, he said.

Barton said Bob’s has seen more significant customer gains among higher-income households in recent years. About 27% of its customers have an annual household income of more than $150,000, and that part of the customer base is growing the fastest. He said that group is up by about 3% as a share of Bob’s shoppers in the past two years.

About half of its customers have an annual household income of more than $100,000, he said.

Bob’s is known for selling lower-priced couches, rugs, dining room tables and other furniture. It has an average order value of about $1,400 per transaction, excluding sales at its outlets, according to its S-1 filing. The retailer estimates its prices are on average about 10% lower than its value-focused furniture competitors’ lowest promoted prices or about 20% to 25% below their listed prices.

To keep prices low, the company said it relies on a “curated merchandising strategy, longstanding sourcing relationships and efficient supply chain,” according to the filing. It carries roughly one-third fewer items than value-oriented competitors, but orders in larger quantities, the filing said.

It’s also tried to stand apart from other furniture retailers with quicker deliveries. Instead of customers waiting for weeks or months, most purchases can be delivered in as few as three days, the company said in the filing.

With its new locations, Bob’s plans to add to both existing and new markets, Chief Financial Officer Carl Lukach told CNBC. It plans to open stores in regions where it already has high density, such as in the Midwest and the New England area, but also expand to new states this year, including South Carolina and Tennessee.

Initial public offerings in the U.S. are expected to gain momentum this year, as waning inflation and interest rate cuts are expected to nudge late-stage private companies off the sidelines, according to a report by consulting firm PwC. They’ll build on a decent past year for IPOs, too. Traditional IPOs raised $33.6 billion in 2025, which represented the best year since 2021.

This year, IPO activity may be led by artificial intelligence infrastructure, insurance and specialty risk companies, and AI-enabled software platforms, according to PwC. Industrials and manufacturing, including reshoring, aerospace and defense, and energy or grid-related infrastructure have gotten higher interest, too.

One of the widely anticipated IPOs this year is of Elon Musk’s company SpaceX. News of the potential IPO broke in December and Musk called reports about the planned offering “accurate.”

Estée Lauder expects $100 million tariff hit to full-year profitability; stock sinks more than 20%

0
Estée Lauder expects $100 million tariff hit to full-year profitability; stock sinks more than 20%

In this photo illustration the Estee Lauder Companies Inc. logo seen displayed on a smartphone with Estee Lauder Companies Inc. logo in the background. 

Thiago Prudencio | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Estée Lauder said Thursday it’s expecting a $100 million hit to its full-year profitability because of tariff impacts.

The beauty company’s stock tumbled roughly 20% on Thursday.

The company is currently in the midst of a turnaround plan, dubbed “Beauty Reimagined,” that’s expected to cost between $1.2 billion and $1.6 billion and is aimed at revitalizing its growth. In its fiscal second-quarter earnings report on Thursday, the company said it still expects net workforce reductions of 5,800 to 7,000 as part of its restructuring.

Estée Lauder said it has been “actively evaluating developments and mitigation strategies” to reduce tariff impacts. The company said it has leveraged trade programs, optimized its regional manufacturing footprint and increased supply chain agility, all of which have offset more than half of the expected impacts.

The company said it expects tariff headwinds to impact profitability mostly in the second half. It also identified assumed tariff rates in Switzerland, Canada, China, Mexico, the European Union and Japan, where it has a facility, as part of its calculation.

Still, Estée Lauder said it continues to monitor the active tariff situations and is working to implement further strategies to offset those costs even more, including “potential pricing actions.”

The company also said it was raising its fiscal outlook after solid performance in the first half of the year, though it said it would remain cautious about the macroeconomic environment.

“In this pivotal year, Beauty Reimagined has invigorated our business as we execute the biggest operational, leadership, and cultural transformation in our history,” CEO Stéphane de La Faverie said in a statement. “On its one-year anniversary, we raise our fiscal 2026 outlook confident in the strength of our turnaround, even as our second half reflects previously-expected headwinds and now-greater consumer-facing investments, as we expect to restore organic sales growth and expand our operating margin for the first time in four years.”

Correction: Stéphane de La Faverie is CEO of Estee Lauder. An earlier version misspelled his name.

Peloton shares plunge 26% on weak holiday quarter, sluggish demand for splashy new products

0
Peloton shares plunge 26% on weak holiday quarter, sluggish demand for splashy new products

Peloton posted a worse-than-expected holiday quarter on Thursday after shoppers failed to shell out for its new AI-driven product line and turned away from higher subscription prices, sending shares down 26%.

The connected fitness company missed Wall Street’s estimates on the top and bottom lines and fell short of its own internal sales targets in the three months ended Dec. 31 – typically the strongest for Peloton’s hardware revenue. 

The company said it expects sluggish sales to continue in the current quarter. Peloton forecasts revenue between $605 million and $625 million, below expectations of $638 million, according to LSEG. 

The weak results, coupled with soft guidance, are the first clues investors have that Peloton’s product overhaul may not be the sales driver the company hoped it would be.

The revamped assortment, which came with artificial intelligence-powered tracking cameras, speakers, 360-degree swivel screens and hands-free control, was designed to grow sales and bring in new customers. But Peloton’s results show demand has been sluggish. 

“I will not be satisfied until this company is back to healthy, sustained top line growth,” CEO Peter Stern said on a call with analysts. He said the company has seen improvement in the sense that its revenue declines are getting less steep, but he acknowledged that is “not enough.”

While Peloton’s top line might be disappointing to investors, the company is still making gains in improving its profitability. Over the holiday quarter, the company generated $81 million in adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, better than the $73 million analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount. 

After it announced plans to lay off 11% of its staff last week, the company expects to generate between $120 million and $135 million in adjusted EBITDA in the current quarter, better than the $119 million analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.

It raised its full-year adjusted EBITDA guidance to between $450 million and $500 million, up from a prior range of between $425 million and $475 million. 

That’s welcome news to investors because it shows Peloton was able to innovate its product line without draining profitability. 

Also on Thursday, the company announced CFO Liz Coddington is leaving Peloton to “pursue an opportunity outside the industry.” She’s staying on through March as the company searches for its next finance chief.

Here’s how Peloton did in its fiscal second quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

  • Loss per share: 9 cents vs. 6 cents expected
  • Revenue: $657 million vs. $674 million expected

The company’s net loss for the quarter was $38.8 million, or 9 cents per share, a significant improvement from the $92 million, or 24 cents per share, it lost in the year ago period. 

Sales fell to $656.5 million, down about 3% from $673.9 million a year earlier.

Since Peter Stern took over as Peloton’s CEO, he’s worked to generate new revenue streams and build on the company’s progress of improving its profitability. 

The revamped product assortment was one of his first big moments as CEO and included new prices for both subscriptions and hardware. Despite higher prices, revenue for both hardware and subscription came in lower than expected, indicating unit sales have been weak.

Hardware sales drove $244 million in revenue during the quarter while subscriptions saw $413 million in sales, both below expectations of $253 million and $424 million, respectively, according to StreetAccount. 

Part of the issue was Peloton had expected more of its current members to swap out their old hardware.

“We simply overestimated the rate with which existing members would want to upgrade their existing equipment to new equipment. The only historical data point we had as a company on this was when we launched Bike Plus a few years ago, and that was a really fundamental reinvention of the entire frame of the Bike,” said Stern. “And so we did not, as it turns out, see the same rate of upgrade from existing members.”

Looking ahead, investors want to see if Stern can bring the company back to growth now that expenses have stabilized and profitability is improving. In an economy where value is more important than ever, it’s been tough to convince shoppers to spend thousands on stationary bikes and treadmills.

One glimmer could be the company’s growing commercial business unit, which includes commercial versions of its Bike+, Tread+ and Row+ that will be marketed to places that have small gyms, like hotels, apartment buildings, corporate wellness centers and country clubs. 

During the quarter, revenue in Peloton’s commercial business unit was up 10%.

Angelina Jolie sparks health concerns as Brad Pitt lawsuit refuses to end

0
Angelina Jolie sparks health concerns as Brad Pitt lawsuit refuses to end

Angelina Jolie sparks health concerns as Brad Pitt lawsuit refuses to end

Angelina Jolie is reportedly struggling as legal war with ex-husband Brad Pitt continues.

As per Radar Online, the Oscar-winning actress appeared visibly frail during her recent humanitarian visit.

The source said, “Angie is exhausted and clearly not taking care of herself. The stress never stops, and it’s catching up with her in a very visible way.”

Despite their divorce being finalized in December 2024, the ex-couple remain locked in bitter dispute over their French winery, Chateau Miraval.

Jolie is said to be struggling to maintain the weight, despite encouragement from her children. The source said, “Angie’s been trying to eat more, but when she’s really stressed out, her appetite is nonexistent.”

“She’s still under 100 pounds,” they added.

An insider warned that the legal costs and prolonged court proceedings are constant source of anxiety for Jolie. “The legal bills are enormous. Angie’s not without work, but the debts are piling up and that kind of stress is incredibly hard on the body,” thee source said.

They added, “The sheer scale of stress she’s enduring is not good for someone with her health history.”

Furthermore, Angelina Jolie’s friends are also said to be concerned, worrying that she may not slow down until her body forces her to take a step back.

“It’s obvious she needs a break. But knowing Angie, people worry that she won’t slow down until her body forces her to,” an insider said.

SEC distributing more than $1B to its schools for 2024-25 fiscal year

0
SEC distributing more than $1B to its schools for 2024-25 fiscal year

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Southeastern Conference is distributing more than $1 billion to its 16 universities for the 2024-25 fiscal year, which ended last August.

The total distribution jumped more than $200 million from the previous year. The current total includes $37.4 million retained by universities that participated in the College Football Playoff and bowl games.

The amount distributed from the conference office, including bowl revenue retained by participants, averaged $72.4 million for schools with full year financial participation. Oklahoma and Texas, which joined the conference in July 2024, received distributions of $2.6 million and $12.1 million, respectively, related to CFP and bowl participation and designated NCAA funds.

The $72.4 million average per school is approximately $18.6 million above the 2023-24 average of $53.8 million for full members.

The payout for the 14 schools receiving a full share is comprised of revenue generated from television agreements, postseason bowls, the CFP, the SEC title game, the SEC men’s basketball tournament and NCAA championships.

Nearly 40% of cancers can be prevented with 3 lifestyle changes, study finds

0
Nearly 40% of cancers can be prevented with 3 lifestyle changes, study finds

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Nearly half of cancers could be avoided by cutting out three major risk factors, a new study has revealed.

Research published this week in Nature Medicine identified that nearly 40% of global cancer cases are linked to tobacco (15% of new cases), infections (10%) and alcohol consumption (3%).

Overall, 7.1 million cancer diagnoses in 2022 were linked to 30 modifiable risk factors, according to the study.

DOES CANCER REDUCE ALZHEIMER’S RISK? NEW STUDY EXPLORES THE CONNECTION

“The key here is that almost half of all cancers could be prevented by behavioral changes,” Dr. Marc Siegel, Fox News Digital senior medical analyst, told Fox News Digital.

Conducted by the World Health Organization and its International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), the study analyzed global cancer data across 185 countries, matching it with exposure data for the 30 risk factors.

Nearly half of cancers could be avoided by cutting out three major risk factors, a new study has revealed. (iStock)

Lung, stomach and cervical cancers accounted for nearly half of the cases that were linked to modifiable risks, with many linked to viruses and bacteria like the human papillomavirus (HPV), hepatitis B and C, and Helicobacter pylori (a common bacterium that infects the stomach lining).

“Preventable cancers of the cervix and throat are directly linked to the HPV virus and can be prevented by the HPV vaccine,” added Siegel, who was not involved in the study.

DEADLY CANCER RISK SPIKES WITH CERTAIN LEVEL OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION, STUDY FINDS

Lung cancer, throat and GI cancers, and several others were linked to cigarette smoking, and alcohol was associated with breast, liver, colon and throat cancer, the doctor noted.

“Environmental factors are also key, varying by geography — 45% of new cancers could be prevented in men, and 30% in women,” he said.

Woman feeling sick

Lung, stomach and cervical cancers accounted for nearly half of the cases that were linked to modifiable risks. (iStock)

Study author Hanna Fink, from the Cancer Surveillance Branch at IARC/WHO, said the main message is that many cancers can be prevented.

“Almost four in 10 new cancer cases worldwide, which represent 7.1 million lives that don’t need to be changed by a cancer diagnosis, were linked to things we can change or modify through awareness and public-health action,” she told Fox News Digital.

COMMON VITAMIN BYPRODUCT MAY HELP CANCER EVADE IMMUNE SYSTEM, STUDY FINDS

“These things include tobacco smoking, infections, alcohol consumption, excess body weight, air pollution, ultraviolet radiation and others.”

Looking ahead, the researchers recommend that stronger prevention strategies targeting tobacco use, infections, unhealthy body weight and alcohol use could substantially reduce global cancer cases.

“The key here is that almost half of all cancers could be prevented by behavioral changes.”

“The study reinforces that cancer prevention works, and action is most effective at the population level,” Fink said. 

“Governments and communities play a crucial role by making healthy choices easier, for example, through higher tobacco and alcohol taxes, smoke-free policies, clear health warnings, safer workplaces, cleaner air, and affordable access to vaccination and screening. Individuals can support these by advocating for healthier environments and using available preventive services.”

Reducing the risk

The AIRC offers the following recommendations to minimize cancer risk.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

  • Do not smoke, and if you do smoke, seek help to quit.
  • Keep alcohol intake as low as possible, as “there is no safe level of alcohol for cancer risk.”
  • Aim for a healthy body weight over time with a balanced diet and regular physical activity.
  • Move more and sit less, as even small amounts of daily movement help.
  • Take advantage of vaccines, especially the HPV vaccination for young people and the hepatitis B vaccination.
Man smoking

Tobacco was linked to 15% of new cancer cases, making it the largest modifiable risk factor. (iStock)

“As a family physician, I try to help my patients understand how important their daily habits are in lowering their future cancer risk,” said Dr. Chris Scuderi, a cancer survivor and Florida-based family physician.

The doctor’s key prevention targets include daily exercise, consistent and restorative sleep, a Mediterranean-style diet, regular doctor’s visits and sufficient rest.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES

“Small daily wins add up to make a powerful difference over time,” added Scuderi, who also was not involved in the research. “It’s also essential to stay on top of your routine screenings, which your family physician can help you with.”

Potential limitations

The study did have some limitations. The researchers often used data from around 2012 due to the long delay between exposure and cancer, which means the data may not reflect the most recent behaviors or environments.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

“This is a necessary simplification, because in reality, latency can be longer or shorter depending on the cancer and the exposure,” Fink noted.

Healthy habits

A doctor recommended daily exercise, consistent and restorative sleep, a Mediterranean-style diet, regular doctor’s visits and sufficient rest to help reduce risk. (iStock)

Siegel pointed out that cancer types vary by geographic region — for example, stomach cancer is more prominent in Asia — and the relationships between risk factors and cancer prevalence can differ between countries, populations and time periods.

“We rely on the best available data on how common each risk factor is in different countries and how strongly it is linked to cancer, but these data are not perfect and are weaker in some low- and middle-income countries,” Fink said.

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

Finally, the study only looked at 30 risk factors with the strongest evidence and global data.

“Our estimate of ‘almost 40% of cancers are preventable’ is very likely conservative,” the researcher added. “Some other suspected causes, such as certain aspects of diet, could not be included because the science or the data are not yet robust enough at a global level.” 

Anti-ICE ‘digital Minutemen’ use military-grade surveillance tactics against feds

0
Anti-ICE 'digital Minutemen' use military-grade surveillance tactics against feds

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Early last week, FBI Director Kash Patel announced that the bureau is investigating the use of the encrypted Signal messaging platform by “ICE Watch” activists to track and block federal immigration enforcement.

Just days later, Jill Garvey, co-founder of a group called “States at the Core,” logged into a Zoom webinar to train a new crop of “rapid responders” on a military-grade intelligence gathering method called “SALUTE.” An acronym for Size, Activity, Location, Uniform, Time, Equipment, SALUTE is a mnemonic device that typically instructs soldiers how to systematically track details about enemies. Garvey framed the work as operational surveillance against agents she had called “mercenaries” in an interview days earlier.

“We are all ICE Watch!” declared Garvey, whose group is funded by the Hopewell Fund, a dark-money organization aligned with the Democratic Party. She added a boast that she’s taught 40,000 “rapid responders” this past year.

Garvey is  just one of hundreds of anti-government operatives training agitators to interfere with federal law enforcement. Last Saturday, Manola De Los Santos, co-founder of the People’s Forum – a Marxist-Leninist organization funded by a China-based tech tycoon, Neville Roy Singham, with documented ties to the Chinese Communist Party – hosted an all-day “People’s Assembly for ICE Out of NY!” at the group’s headquarters on W. 37th Street.

“Adopt a corner!” leaders urged, instructing attendees to conduct surveillance tactics at fixed locations.

That same day, at about 4 p.m. ET, a user on one of 37 Signal chats operated by the “Seattle Area Rapid Response” network shared a copy of the “Mini-Manual Of The Urban Guerrilla,” a 67-page Marxist manifesto outlining the use of “mobile units,” “surprise,” “knowledge of the terrain,” “occupation,” “mobility and speed,” a “clandestine press,” “popular support” and “street tactics,” such as “constructing barricades,” “throwing bottles” and ultimately using lethal weapons, to wage a “revolutionary armed struggle” against the United States.

The user directed fellow “rapid responders” to page 35 for “security level questions.” There, the manual advised recording a “daily information service” on “what the enemy appears to be doing, where the police net is operating and what points are being watched.”

A Fox News Digital investigation reveals these groups are part of a nationwide web of at least 200 anti-ICE organizations that are building a civilian intelligence-gathering and “rapid response” system that trains, mobilizes and activates civilians to act as on-the-ground scouts, using the SALUTE method to collect data on federal authorities they cast as the “enemy,” raising serious national security concerns. 

In intelligence circles, they would be called “collectors” in the craft of “human intelligence, or “HUMINT.”

Fox News Digital has established that these national operations feed data about the movements of law enforcement and immigration authorities into at least 13 sophisticated databases, storing highly-sensitive information including license plate numbers, timestamps, geolocation data, uniform details, photographs, behavior patterns and, in at least one case, the names, email addresses and phone numbers of federal authorities. The network operates through at least 18 hubs nationwide in largely Democratic states and cities, coordinating traffic, verification and reporting.

GUN-WIELDING ICE AGENTS BRUSH BACK MINNEAPOLIS AGITATORS

“MN ICE Plates” is one of many databases that have emerged in recent months, storing the photos, license plates, movements, behaviors and vehicles of federal, state and local law enforcement officers and agents.  (MN ICE Plates)

“This is mind-blowing. We have an entire nation of collectors against our country’s law enforcement. It’s extremely dangerous,” said retired U.S. Army Green Beret Eric Schwalm, who first learned the SALUTE framework as a newly enlisted Army private, later applying it during patrols in Iraq as he fought an insurgency and, then, in Afghanistan as he trained Northern Alliance fighters to defeat the Taliban government. 

After reviewing the civilian training, operations and databases uncovered by Fox News Digital, he said, “If Iraqi resistance ran this level of operation against us, we couldn’t have stayed past 2007. They didn’t even need to shoot at us. Protests like this would have created a narrative nightmare.”

Indeed, these stakeouts have not only become deadly, with the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, but they have led to many confrontations and most often put federal authorities on the losing end of a narrative war. On Tuesday, a group of “rapid responders” in “Minnesota Ice Watch” tailed ICE agents so closely with their vehicles that agents ordered them — at gunpoint — to stop their cars, before handcuffing and detaining them.

At a recent anti-ICE training webinar, Gabe Gonzalez, a co-founder of “Protect Rogers Park,” a neighborhood anti-ICE group in north Chicago that pioneered the “rapid response” alerts, coaxed the webinar’s attendees to take risks, complimenting them as “courageous.” His group includes SALUTE in its “SOP,” or standing operating procedures, to “protect targeted locations,” like churches and food pantries, and organize “Remote Responders” stationed at “cafes and shops,” “near windows of major throughways” and other “sensitive areas.”

CCP-CONNECTED MILLIONAIRE ALLEGEDLY BANKROLLS MINNEAPOLIS AGITATOR GROUPS THROUGH DARK MONEY NETWORK

MN ICE Plates database list of abductors

According to a Fox News Digital investigation, at least 200 groups are training civilians to use a military-grade reporting technique called “S.A.L.U.T.E.” to collect data on federal, state and local law enforcement agents., which “MN License Plates” database calls “Abductors.” (MN ICE Plates)

Raising particular national security concerns, the network includes foot soldiers and leaders of the ANSWER Coalition and the Party for Socialism and Liberation, two professional protest organizations in the Singham network that openly support the People’s Republic of China as an ideal state and declare they seek to dismantle the “hyper-imperialism” of the “American empire” from inside the “belly of the beast.” The organizations didn’t return requests for comment.

Several congressional committees are investigating Singham’s network, which now includes “ICE Out of New York.” That group tells donors online: “Yes, your donation is tax-deductible. We are collecting donations through The People’s Forum which is a 501(c)3 not for profit organization…” As part of its efforts, its leaders created a slick “Migra Whistle Instructional Zine,” with the SALUTE method detailed under the header: “SPREAD INFORMATION, NOT PANIC.”

“FORM A CROWD. STAY LOUD,” the flyer instructed its scouts.

In upstate New York, Rafael Concepcion, a former assistant teaching professor of photography at Syracuse University, told Fox News Digital he plans to launch “a score” of new ICE tracking databases built from a mapping platform he published last year, called “DEICER” for “Diversity Equity Inclusion Community Engagement Reporter.”

Concepcion said he wanted to build a “network of digital minutemen,” the elite hand-picked rapid-deployment force that were part of the New England colonial militia, ready at a “minute’s notice” to scout British Army locations during the American Revolution, often times before skirmishes broke out.

In today’s scenario, U.S. federal authorities are the target. Concepcion said “the use of the SALUTE method” is to differentiate between local police and federal immigration officers

“One of the things that our constitution has tried to be able to provide is an avenue for individuals to make sure that they are aware of any kind of tyrannical government,” he said. “If we are supposed to be able to guard against foreign and domestic, there should be a mechanism for us to be able to identify that.

Already, Siembar NC, a 501(c)(4) political nonprofit based in Charlotte, N.C., with $2.5 million in revenue in its last tax filing, has launched the DEICER database in North Carolina on a platform called OjoNC. “Ojo” means eyes in Spanish. Further north, LUCE Immigration Justice Network of Massachusetts, a project of Neighbor to Neighbor MA Education Fund, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, has activated Concepcion’s mapping database. In Chicago, he developed “Windbreaker” for local groups to use. The groups didn’t respond to requests for comment.

In a near-identical training last week, Garvey’s session unfolded like a field briefing. She pressed new recruits to assess whether they were observing “a tactical unit,” identify “types of munitions and how much” and determine whether officers were moving in “four, two, four, or six-man formations.” She emphasized the importance of corroboration, instructing participants to “gather more people to confirm what you’re seeing.”

Garvey outlined three defined operational roles — recorder, supporter, and monitor — and instructed participants to carry whistles with coded signals. Three blasts indicated an ICE operation in progress. Participants were told to wear the whistles visibly, so others would recognize that they were “part of the team.” Garvey urged them to rehearse at home what to do if stopped by police.

WATCH: HARDCORE SOCIALIST GROUPS STAGE-MANAGE ANTI-ICE PROTEST IN WASHINGTON

MN ICE Plates database homeland security investigations

Nonprofit groups like “States at the Core” are training civilians in an Army-grade intelligence method called “S.A.L.U.T.E.,” instructing them how to systematically track details about the “Size, Activity, Location, Uniform, Time, Equipment,” of ICE enforcement on platforms like the “MN ICE Plates” database, which includes photos showing the full image of law enforcement officers. Fox News Digital blurred the identities of agents and vehicles unmasked in the database. (MN ICE Plates)

Unassuming in appearance, with well-coiffed blonde hair and a soft-spoken, timid delivery style, Garvey defended the surveillance during the webinar, saying the targets were “public officials.”

A spokesperson for the Hopewell Fund said in a statement, “States at the Core provides training for people to lawfully and peacefully observe law enforcement in their communities, and Hopewell is proud to be their fiscal sponsor.”

Some of the databases have drawn the attention of a counterforce of independent programmers and technology specialists — including anonymous X users with handles such as @astrarce and @b****uneedsoap — who have attempted to disrupt or shut them down. At least one database has gone offline. Others remain active and continue to grow.

The activities of these surveillance networks potentially violate multiple federal laws. Federal statutes, such as 18 U.S.C. § 115 and 18 U.S.C. § 2261A, protect federal agents from threats and stalking, and violations connected to obstructing, striking or resisting federal agents are felonies. 

In Washington state, the Seattle-area rapid response network has spawned 35 separate Signal chats. In Minnesota, there are at least 20 Signal chats. In Rhode Island, the Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance sends out alerts over the WhatsApp messaging platform.

From there, the intelligence flows into databases.

Last June, Dominick Skinner, reportedly an Irish immigration activist based in the Netherlands, first published one of the most egregious databases, “ICE List,” documenting the names, photos, addresses, email addresses and phone numbers of ICE and Border Patrol agents, in a bid to hold them “legally accountable.” The list has grown to an estimated 4,500 entries.

He calls the database a new “journalistic” project of “Crust News,” a Substack newsletter that has published articles against the “dictatorship” of “the USA’s fascist regime” and the “terrorism” of its “modern Gestapo.” 

In his “incident” report, Skinner specifically asks for “clear views of agents, uniforms, vehicles or locations.”

Within minutes, Skinner responded to a request for comment but refused to answer any questions, including about his ideological motivation or funding sources, instead railing against the “fascist media sphere in the USA” and noting “your questions will be shared with the public.”

THE FAR-LEFT NETWORK THAT HELPED PUT ALEX PRETTI IN HARM’S WAY, THEN MADE HIM A MARTYR

MN ICE Plates database vehicle photos

A network of anti-ICE groups have built databases that list vehicles allegedly linked to immigration enforcement activity. They are training civilian scouts to document the make, model, color and even window tint of vehicles and uploading the information even when they are only “Highly suspected ICE.” This image comes from the “MN ICE Plates” database. (MN ICE Plates)

In Minnesota, the developers of the “MN ICE Plates” database use the language of socialist and communist networks to describe themselves as operating in “occupied Minnesota.” It’s supported by “Defend the  612,” the area code for Minneapolis, and its dispatchers sent “rapid responders,” including local resident Alex Pretti, to the Glam Doll Donut shop on Nicollet Avenue, in the hour before his confrontation with federal officials and killing, according to Fox News Digital reporting.

Over the past week, since the FBI investigation launched into the backend surveillance tactics on federal officials,  the database entries have almost doubled to 5,397 records of “confirmed” and “highly suspected” ICE vehicles and agents, with photos, locations, timestamps, and cross-referenced sightings. The database says it is “documenting & resisting against ICE, police, & all colonial militarized regimes,” inspired by “movements towards liberation.”

The data crisscrosses the nation. This past Sunday, at 7:03 p.m. ET, a user filed a “Critical” report on IceOut.org, a web-based reporting platform run by the Pueblo Project Foundation as part of its “People Over Papers” initiative, documenting “possible ICE activity.” 

Earlier that day, on Arnett Street in Elizabeth, N.J., a user alleged that “3 men took a female. There were 4 different cars,” reporting the incident as “Immigration Enforcement” and uploading photographs of the vehicles and alleged agents. Pueblo Project Foundation didn’t return a request for comment.

The “RESIST” platform, whose developers say their database “flips the script on surveillance,” using “facial recognition and biometric tracking.” 

“Mask or not, they can’t hide anymore,” the platform promises, calling itself “civilian-powered intelligence” that “exposes bad actors” and “empowers direct action, public exposure and psychological disruption.”

Another platform, ICEInMyArea.org, created by anonymous developers who didn’t respond to a request for comment, says it has 4,000 daily visitors with human reviews of new reports, making it “one of the most reliable tools for tracking ICE activity nationwide.” 

But its developers promise users “completely anonymous” privacy.

Under “Recent Reports” over the past 24 hours, it details “ICE sighted in New Britain, CT,” on Corbin Avenue near a McDonald’s, “ice agents using the target parking lot” on Colorado Boulevard in Los Angeles “as a base” and a silver Ford Explorer with “no front plate, whited-out/covered rear plate” on N. Aviation Boulevard in Manhattan Beach, Calif.

FBI INVESTIGATING MINNESOTA ANTI-ICE SIGNAL GROUP CHATS, PATEL SAYS

MN ICE Plates database vehicle photos

As part of the “SALUTE” intelligence method that anti-ICE nonprofits are teaching civilian “rapid responders,” they instruct them to include the specific date, time and location of alleged immigration enforcement activity. “Whipple” is shorthand for the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, near Highway 62, where law enforcement activities are frequently tracked in the “MN ICE Plates.” (MN ICE Plates)

On the East Coast, Ahmad Perez, a former Biden administration political appointee and founder of Islip Forward, launched “Long Island ICE Tracker” to document “individuals and vehicles” in public, with “no reasonable expectation of privacy.” He “strictly prohibited” the use of the information to “harass, threaten, intimidate, stalk, doxx or interfere” with “any person” or their “lawful activities.”

Thursday on the site, Perez bragged “574 Verified Sightings” in the database, with a new listing at 1 p.m. of a weathered black Ford vehicle on Nottingham Avenue in Patchogue, N.Y., a decal saying “POLICE INTERCEPTOR” on the rear back door.

“Attempts to label community transparency efforts as ‘illegal’ or ‘surveillance’ often reflect discomfort with accountability rather than genuine concern for ethics or safety,” Perez told Fox News Digital. “Oversight, documentation and public awareness are not threats to democracy — they are foundational to it.”

Online tools even generate QR-codes for SALUTE templates that standardize civilian intelligence collection nationwide. 

In Minnesota, the Workers Defense Alliance of Twin Cities, a socialist group whose website features a graphic of Minneapolis police’s Third Precinct on fire, teaches SALUTE and a Spanish alternative, “ALERTA,” for “Activity, Location, Equipment, Response requested, Time and date, Appearance.” It pitches the framework as “community defense” while explicitly teaching structured surveillance. Its leaders didn’t return a request for comment.

“ICE Watch RI” and Alerta de Migra operate in Rhode Island with the Party for Socialism and Liberation, combining protest mobilization with logged sightings of federal officers.

The creator of another database – “Deportation Tracker” – said he puts in place “strict policies and moderation” so that any content that violates anyone’s privacy is “rejected immediately.” Identifying himself as Sam Fletcher, a high school student, he said, “The platform does not represent any civilian intelligence and surveillance operation. Everything that is submitted must go through a human review before being posted to the site. We don’t allow any names, images or licence plates allowed on the site. Nothing that is personally identifiable to anyone.”

“Any doxxing, harassing or stalking is unacceptable,” he said.

Still, critics say, the database has the information for users to violate Fletcher’s “terms of service.”

Meanwhile, in Portland “Anti-Facist Aktion” hosts a “PDX ICE/DHS License Plates Community Surveillance Database,” claiming to host 627 records. Its developers couldn’t be reached for comment. It notes: “WARNING: THIS INFORMATION IS DANGEROUS TO AUTHORITY.”

Garvey, the blonde anti-ICE mom whose group leads new trainings every several days. In an interview with Wajahat Ali, the host of a podcast called the “The Left Hook,” Ali lauded Garvey’s strategy: “Your camera is your weapon.”

Overnight, local residents in the Seattle Signal chats got alerts that they would have their first “Seattle rapid response drill” on Sunday between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. local time.

The announcement will “follow the standard SALUTE format” to instruct responders where to go.

The alert warned: “don’t be running red lights to get there first, don’t be blowing whistles once you arrive.”

Fox News Digital’s Kiera McDonald contributed to this report.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

A celebration of fake books

0
A celebration of fake books

A first-of-its-kind exhibit in New York City is drawing crowds of book enthusiasts. Ironically, none of the books featured are real. People who judge these so-called “Blooks” by their covers will have a surprise in store when they discover what’s inside these rare, novelty items. Lee Cowan reports.