Man who previously pled guilty to anti-Jewish threats is charged with hate crime for defacing synagogue
Kevin Charles Pyles previously pleaded guilty in state court to making terrorism-related threats targeting the Jewish community.

Alt hed: Trump ally swears Senate GOP will start 'behaving like the Senate' after Trump's latest tantrum Axios co-founders Mike Allen and Jim VandeHei have named the GOP's refusal to stand up to President Donald Trump a "crisis." Writing on Friday, the two asserted that years of blind "obedience" to the MAGA founder has brought the Republican Party to the crisis they find themselves in for 2026. In a way, they've "trained" Trump to believe that his tantrums, threats and erratic demands are not only acceptable but that he will be given what he wants simply to placate him."Trump has spent his second term steamrolling his own party, confident the lawmakers he humiliates will keep voting his way," they wrote. The latest example is Trump's anger over the GOP refusing to eliminate the filibuster to pass Trump's voter restrictions bill. After being told "no," Trump staged a political tantrum and refused to sign the landmark housing affordability bill that both parties came together to craft ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Meanwhile, his own White House was touting the legislation as "one of the most significant pieces of housing affordability legislation in American history.” Even they appeared caught off guard by Trump's mid-morning Truth Social post, deciding to upend one of the few legislative accomplishments Republicans could put their names on to prove they passed legislation to help the affordability crisis.Then,Trump's Capitol Hill meeting resulted in a fiery Trump attacking GOP "losers" who cast ballots in support of curbing Trump's authority over the Iran war. While the four senators were happy to stand on principle to limit the president, they caved and changed their vote after Trump yelled at them during a GOP lunch.All the while, Republican lawmakers refuse to stand up collectively to quiet Trump's tantrums. Now it's coming to the detriment of their party in 2026. An excerpt from the new book by Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan details Trump's glee at Republicans losing elections without his name at the top of the ballot. "The next month, when Republicans performed badly in the off-year elections, Trump would say he was 'honored' that people were saying that they couldn't win without him on the ballot," says the new book, Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump.Now the GOP has returned to a place where they must explain to the American people why they should still keep their jobs while spending the last two years refusing to curb Trump's worst impulses. The Axios reporters cited one long-time Trump ally saying, "The Senate is now behaving like the Senate. More to come. If he loses the Senate, his presidency will be effectively over. Yet he's acting like it doesn't matter."It's unclear if that was said before or after the four Republican senators caved into Trump, calling them "losers" and changing their votes less than 48 hours ago.
Kevin Charles Pyles previously pleaded guilty in state court to making terrorism-related threats targeting the Jewish community.
President Trump on Friday acknowledged Tehran's drone strike on a ship in the Strait of Hormuz a day earlier.
Ex-national security adviser turned Trump critic could face prison for sharing classified information with relativesUS politics live – latest updatesJohn Bolton, the former US national security adviser who became an arch-enemy of Donald Trump after serving under him and then being fired, pleaded guilty on Friday to a charge of mishandling classified information that could result in him going to prison.Bolton admitted the charge, as widely anticipated, in an appearance at a federal court in Greenbelt, Maryland, in a plea deal designed to produce a lesser sentence by reducing the seriousness of the accusations against him. Continue reading...
US President Donald Trump accused Iran of violating their ceasefire agreement by firing at cargo ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz.
On Friday morning, June 26, former National Security Adviser John Bolton entered a guilty plea to illegally retaining classified information related to his work in the first Trump administration. But Bolton's attorney, that same morning, gave a scathing opinion of the indictment.Lowell, according to journalist Scott MacFarlane, said, in his statement, "Ambassador Bolton did what real leaders do. He took responsibility for a mistake he made, thereby saving the government resources to pursue a case that could expose additional sensitive information. By contrast, President Trump thumbed his nose at the classified information laws, took actual classified documents to his Florida mansion, interfered with the investigation of that conduct, and has never accepted any accountability for his conduct. Ambassador Bolton, whose offense was only keeping a diary which contained classified information, kept a record to preserve history, but Donald Trump kept secrets to serve himself."According to NBC News reporters Owen Hayes and Rebecca Shabad, Bolton "faces a prison sentence of up to 60 months and has agreed to pay $2.25 million, prosecutors said. He is set to be sentenced October 28."Hayes and Shabad note, "Bolton described the national security information that he retained as an electronic diary entry that he shared with two members of his family. Bolton was originally indicted in October 2025, charged with eight counts of transmission of national defense information and 10 counts of retention of national defense information. He pleaded not guilty to the charges and faced up to 10 years in prison, a $250,000 fine per count, and three years of special release."The NBC News reporters point out that in 2025, Lowell said of the case against Bolton, "The underlying facts in this case were investigated and resolved years ago. These charges stem from portions of Amb. Bolton's personal diaries over his 45-year career — records that are unclassified, shared only with his immediate family, and known to the FBI as far back as 2021."Hayes and Shabad report, "Last fall, Bolton was the third Trump critic to be indicted by the Justice Department, which also charged New York Attorney General Letitia James and former FBI Director James Comey in separate cases on charges of mortgage fraud and lying to Congress, respectively. After a federal judge dismissed the charges against James, the DOJ twice failed to re-indict her."
Bolton faces a prison sentence of up to five years and has agreed to pay $2.25m in fine, prosecutors say.
As expected, former National Security Advisor John Bolton pleaded guilty to retaining classified documents and his sentencing is set for October.
Former White House national security adviser John Bolton pleaded guilty Friday to charges that he unlawfully kept and transmitted classified national security information. The case is a big win for President Donald Trump, who went after Bolton after he exposed embarrassing details about Trump’s first term.Bolton admitted to sharing classified details with his wife and daughter, which amounts to one felony count. He was accused of 18 violations, but only pleaded guilty to one. Bolton has agreed to pay a fine of over $2 million, and could face up to five years in prison.The case centered around notes Bolton took for his 2020 memoir, The Room Where It Happened, and the information he shared with his family as part of the editing process. During the first Trump administration, the Justice Department tried to prevent the book from coming out, claiming it contained classified information.The memoir revealed damning details about the first Trump presidency, including Trump’s corrupt foreign policy dealings, his general incompetence, and confirmation that Trump withheld military aid from Ukraine until they agreed to investigate Joe Biden, which Trump was impeached for in 2019.Trump has called his former national security adviser a “lowlife” and a “sleazebag,” and claimed that if he had listened to Bolton’s advice while in office, the U.S. would be in “World War Six” by now.Though Bolton is just one of many Trump enemies that have been prosecuted at the president’s fancy, CNN reports that the case against him was more sound than the others.