James Handy’s girlfriend claims accused killer son had schizophrenia, stopped taking meds before fatal stabbing
The 81-year-old "Top Gun: Maverick" actor was found stabbed to death outside of his Tarzana, California, home on Wednesday.

Handy was found unconscious at his home in Tarzana, California, on Wednesday.
The 81-year-old "Top Gun: Maverick" actor was found stabbed to death outside of his Tarzana, California, home on Wednesday.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested several violent criminal illegal aliens on Thursday, according to a Department of Homeland Security press release exclusively obtained by Blaze News.The DHS highlighted five recent arrests and commended the efforts of ICE officers despite ongoing criticism from sanctuary politicians.‘If you see an ICE officer, thank them for their service.’“Yesterday, they arrested rapists, violent assailants, and drug traffickers,” stated DHS acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis.“Despite their best efforts to keep our communities safe, sanctuary politicians continue spreading falsehoods about the men and women of ICE law enforcement and ICE facilities around the country,” Bis continued. “If you see an ICE officer, thank them for their service.”Federal immigration agents arrested Esteban Morales-Cruz, an illegal alien from Mexico. He was previously convicted of lewd acts with a child under 14 years old in Santa Ana, California. RELATED: 'Violent agitator' savagely bit ICE agent during riots in New Jersey, says DHS Esteban Morales-Cruz. Image source: Department of Homeland SecurityGabriel Olivares, an illegal alien from Argentina, was also nabbed by ICE agents. His rap sheet includes a prior conviction for sodomy in Goshen, New York. Gabriel Olivares. Image source: Department of Homeland SecurityICE captured a Guatemalan national, Wilson Avila-Perez. The criminal illegal alien was convicted of assault, domestic violence, and forgery — possession of a forged instrument in Phoenix, Arizona. Wilson Avila-Perez. Image source: Department of Homeland SecurityImmigration agents arrested Juan Carlos Herrera-Salazar, an illegal alien from Mexico who was convicted of selling heroin and cocaine in Salt Lake City, Utah. Juan Carlos Herrera-Salazar. Image source: Department of Homeland SecurityDHS also noted ICE’s arrest of David Livingston Attoh. The illegal alien from Ghana was convicted of aggravated identity theft and conspiracy to commit bank fraud in Baltimore, Maryland. Attoh was sentenced to three years in federal prison after pleading guilty to participating in a bank fraud conspiracy, according to a press release from the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office. RELATED: Democrat governor files 'frivolous' lawsuit to shut down ICE facility David Livingston Attoh. Image source: Department of Homeland Security“Our ICE law enforcement officers truly are the best of the best. They put their lives on the line every day to arrest the worst of the worst,” Bis said.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
President Donald Trump has reached a "moment of demarcation" that signals the end of his presidency is near, according to one of the president's biographers. Michael Wolff, who has written four books about Trump, noted during a new episode of "Inside Trump's Head," a podcast he co-hosts with Joanna Coles of The Daily Beast, that Trump has had a "rough couple of weeks" as his losses continue to pile up. Wolff pointed to issues such as Congress curtailing his war powers in Iran, and his seeming inability to escape the Jeffrey Epstein saga. "I've more and more understood this and appreciated this, and I think it's an important moment. It's a moment of demarcation," Wolff said. "It's a 'two things can be true at the same time' moment. Trump is going to continue to be mendacious and dangerous and damaging to all kinds of things, but at the same time, very clearly, as clearly as can possibly be, this Trump enterprise is coming apart. And I think we're right at the center." "And it all sort of brings this together in his falling poll numbers, the fact that he is in trouble on all of the foundational policies of his administration — that he could fix the economy," Wolff said. "Immigration was his issue, the issue that was fueling him instead of the issue that is causing him now so many problems, so many problems with his base, the health care issues also causing him problems. It's one problem after another after another that he cannot surmount."
The Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act was brought to the Senate as an amendment by Lindsey Graham as part of the $70 billion budget reconciliation package funding Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol. The usual senate suspects, Thom Tillis, Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins and Mitch McConnell voted with Democrats to kill the […] The post Usual Suspects – Senate Fails Again to Pass Save America Act, Voter Integrity Legislation appeared first on The Last Refuge.
Graham Platner, the scandal plagued Democratic Socialist (communist) running for a U.S. The post Watch Democrat Senators Squirm When Asked About Graham Platner of Maine (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
An Oklahoma man has been arrested on nine felony charges for allegedly making death threats against Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD).According to Politico, while the motive of 63-year-old David Shuck has not been publicly released, the Justice Department "described the case as part of an initiative related to an order President Donald Trump signed last September, known as NSPM-7, targeting 'domestic terrorism and organized political violence'" — with an emphasis specifically on "Antifa" and other left-wing protest activity.NSPM-7 has raised alarm bells from legal observers, who have warned it could be used to target Trump's political critics.Another criticism of the operation, per the report, is that it characterizes Antifa "as an organized entity when it is a vague label applied to a wide range of dissenting groups and people."Shuck, who, according to the report, previously served 18 months in prison for a marijuana grow operation, is out of jail on $10,000 bond as of press time.Death threats against public figures have been an ongoing issue for years, and have targeted officials in both parties. In one of the most bizarre recent examples, a U.S. Senate candidate was arrested last month over threats to kill President Donald Trump.
Former Attorney General Pam Bondi's testimony with the House Oversight Committee was released on Thursday, revealing new details about the Department of Justice's rollout of the Epstein files. Bondi was interviewed by House lawmakers on Capitol Hill last week and responded to questions about criticisms of how the department handled the release of documents and materials related to Jeffrey Epstein and his co-conspirators.Here are five things to know about Bondi's testimony.1. Bondi claimed she did not know about a document where Epstein’s 10 co-conspirators are listed.Lawmakers showed Bondi an email from the 2019 Epstein case in the Southern District of New York and asked her to comment.At one point, Bondi's attorney, Harmeet Dhillon, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights at the Justice Department, told the lawmakers, "She's not going to answer that.""I don't recall ever reviewing this document, so I don't know who's in it, and that came from the FBI New York," Bondi said.2. Bondi blamed Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche for the release of the Epstein files. Bondi said that Blanche was responsible for overseeing the Department of Justice's release of the documents and materials. “He was in charge of the process and the entire release of the Epstein files," Bondi said.She also said he briefed her on the case as soon as she joined the DOJ as attorney general in January 2025.3. She claimed Blanche interviewed Ghislaine Maxwell because no one from the DOJ had interviewed her about Epstein."I believe Deputy Attorney General, now-Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, has said on several occasions that Epstein, by that time, was dead and no one had taken — had made an effort to interview Ghislaine Maxwell to see if she had evidence of co-conspirators and other crimes, and that was why he interviewed her," Bondi said.She said she did not recall how the interview was prompted or whether Maxwell reached out first."I believe — I don't believe who initiated it. If she reached out to us, I believe — I don't want to speculate, but I believe Deputy Attorney General Blanche, at the time, reached out to them because there was someone, still living, in prison, who had potential information about other co-conspirators and crimes," Bondi said.4. Bondi did not confirm if Blanche had knowledge of Maxwell's prison relocation."He may, and I'm not sure if he'd addressed that publicly. Probably. But transferring a prisoner is the decision of the Bureau of Prisons," Bondi said.5. Bondi does not think Maxwell should be pardoned by President Donald Trump."I believe she should die in prison," Bondi said. "She was a monster, just like Jeffrey Epstein," Bondi added. "She recruited these young women to a life of prostitution and abuse. And I often think the women that do that are just as bad, if not worse, than the men, because she participated in it."