National News Roundup: FBI Searches Georgia Election Site, Tensions Rise Over Minneapolis Shooting, and More
WASHINGTON D.C. – The FBI searched a Georgia election site for 2020 voting records, tensions escalated in Minneapolis following a fatal shooting by federal agents, multimillion-dollar bonds were set for suspects accused of trying to kill an Indiana judge, and President Trump nominated an assistant attorney general for fraud enforcement, according to various news sources.
In Georgia, Fulton County officials reported that the FBI seized original 2020 voting records on Wednesday while executing a search warrant at the county's Elections Hub and Operations Center, according to ABC News. The FBI confirmed they were conducting court-authorized activity at the facility. The search occurred after President Trump repeatedly questioned the state's 2020 election results, alleging voter fraud contributed to his election loss, ABC News reported. Georgia officials audited and certified the results following the election.
Minneapolis is experiencing heightened tensions after the Saturday morning shooting of Alex Pretti, 37, an ICU nurse, by federal agents, ABC News reported. This marks the second shooting of a U.S. citizen this month by federal agents in the city, following the fatal shooting of Renee Good, 37, on Jan. 7, according to ABC News. Protests and clashes with law enforcement have erupted in the streets in the aftermath of Pretti's shooting. ABC News reported that video appears to show Pretti clashing with agents days before the shooting.
In Indiana, a judge set multimillion-dollar bonds on Wednesday for three men charged with attempted murder in connection with the shooting of Tippecanoe County Judge Steven Meyer and his wife, Kimberly, on Jan. 18, ABC News reported. Both Steven and Kimberly Meyer were wounded in the shooting at their home in Lafayette.
President Trump nominated federal prosecutor Colin McDonald to serve as the assistant attorney general for national fraud enforcement, a newly created role, Fox News reported Wednesday. McDonald is currently serving as an associate deputy attorney general at the Department of Justice. According to Fox News, Trump created the new division at the Department of Justice "to catch and stop" fraud.
Meanwhile, in New Jersey, Old Bridge Township councilmember Anita Greenberg-Belli defended Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) during a heated public meeting on Jan. 27, Fox News reported. Greenberg-Belli criticized disruptive protests and condemned comparisons of federal agents to Nazis as ignorant and historically offensive, according to Fox News. The council meeting involved residents debating immigration enforcement and local police cooperation with federal authorities.
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