Thursday, July 2, 2026

Update on the Billy Schmidt murder case


16-year-old suspect in Philadelphia murder of Penn State senior arrested by US Marshals over 1,700 miles away

Britain's grooming gangs


What Did He Just Say?

BY TYLER DURDEN
THURSDAY, JUL 02, 2026 - 09:00 AM

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity News,

In a parliamentary clash exposing deep failures in the justice system, Conservative MP Katie Lam confronted the Government over whether grooming gang perpetrators would serve their already lenient prison terms in full. 

The minister's reply has sparked widespread fury, highlighting a complacency that victims and the public find utterly unacceptable.

When Lam asked for assurances on full sentences, Justice Minister Jake Richards pointed to prison capacity, stressing the need to ensure serious offenders "serve time at all" amid prison shortages and building programs.

Lam slammed the reaction: "He wouldn't even commit to that. In fact, he seemed to suggest that we should be grateful that these men are serving time in prison at all because of a lack of prison places. What planet are these people living on?"

She continued, "Even if we're facing a shortage of prison places, how can it possibly be the case that grooming gang perpetrators aren't amongst the highest priority offenders...?"

"Ensuring that these vile men serve out their sentences isn't a nice-to-have. It's the bare minimum," Lam stressed.

In a piece for GB News, Lam further outlined "This week, Parliament debated the early release of rapists and child groomers from prison. It's appalling that this subject was even up for discussion."

She continued: "It's clearly true that those who've committed such heinous crimes should, at the very least, serve out their full prison sentences. But under this Government's prison plans, vile criminals like these are having their sentences cut short. They're being allowed back onto the streets after just a few years behind bars."

"Many Labour MPs still don't seem to have grasped just how horrific these crimes were and just how dangerous the men who committed them are. It's terrifying that people like this are in charge of making decisions about who goes to prison, who stays there, and for how long." Lam further urged.

This comes as one grooming gang ringleader - stripped of British citizenship - faces imminent release but cannot be deported back to Pakistan due to legal loopholes.

The inability to remove such individuals underscores deeper systemic issues with immigration enforcement, citizenship revocation, and prioritizing foreign offenders' "rights" over victim safety and public protection.

Referencing a recent West Yorkshire case, Lam detailed: "In June, twenty perpetrators were convicted of the rape and abuse of three girls... One of the girls was just 12 years old when this gang began to prey on her. Abbas Kaji, one of the offenders, was sentenced to just seven years for rape; Mohammed Ishtiaq Hussain was sentenced to just eight. The idea that these men could be out on the streets even sooner is appalling."

The grooming gangs scandal represents one of Britain's gravest institutional betrayals. These groups terrorized communities across the UK, with authorities often ignoring, suppressing or downplaying the ethnic and cultural patterns - predominantly Pakistani Muslim men targeting white girls - out of fear of racism accusations.

Lam has been vocal on the human cost. She referenced survivor Fiona Goddard, who received notice that her abusers - sentenced to 16-20 years in 2019 - could be eligible for early release: "The hard-won justice that she secured in court is being snatched away from her."

Calls for whole-life sentences, proper inquiries without blind spots on race and religion, and accountability for past cover-ups have grown, amplified by independent reports and public pressure.

The priority should be crystal clear: protect British children, enforce real justice, and reject any notion that jailing child rapists is an optional luxury.

Short sentences, early releases, and evasive answers only deepen the sense of betrayal that has defined this scandal for decades.

Britain needs a justice system that puts victims first and deters monsters - not one that debates basic incarceration as if it's a favor.

Wherever socialism prevails people suffer...who is responsible for not having enough electricity? The anti nuclear power Net Zero fools


"Set Your AC To 78F": NYC Socialist Pleads With Residents As Fragile Grid Faces Blackout Risk

BY TYLER DURDEN
THURSDAY, JUL 02, 2026 - 05:00 AM

"Set your AC to 78 degrees, turn off lights/electronics you're not using, and unplug what you can," New York City Socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani wrote on X late Wednesday.

New Yorkers are now getting a real-world lesson in what Mamdani's recent "warmth of collectivism" comments actually mean: shared sacrifice, including being told to dial back air conditioning during blistering heat as the risk of power blackouts rises.

The deeper issue here is that years of left-wing climate policies and poor grid management have left the metro area and the broader region increasingly vulnerable during peak-demand hours.

Temperatures are forecast to top 100F across NYC and large parts of the Mid-Atlantic and East Coast beginning today. The extreme weather is set to sharply drive up cooling demand, just as power grids are already under pressure from failed climate-change policies colliding with the era of data centers.

On Tuesday, the Energy Department issued emergency orders allowing PJM Interconnection power plants to bypass certain environmental limits to keep electricity flowing. Backup generators have been placed on standby on the grid serving 67 million people across 13 states.

New York City power prices climbed above $1,100 per megawatt-hour by late Wednesday afternoon. PJM expects to break its all-time peak load record of 165.5 gigawatts later today.


Puppy mill outlet

NYC pet store sold ‘hundreds’ of illegal puppy-mill pups while posing as rescue center: suit


Human trafficking


Secret jailhouse calls from West Coast OnlyFans mansion lord — as victim speaks for the first time


A man at the center of a disturbing human trafficking investigation who headed an OnlyFans hustle house allegedly made calls from prison instructing associates to move significant sums of cash out of his accounts.

Accused human trafficker Nikita Tyukalo, 22, was denied a bid to lower his $5 million bail Tuesday. He faces accusations of holding young women against their will at a Bellevue, Washington mansion and forcing them to make online sex content.

Attorneys for Tyukalo attempted to lower his bail to $100,00, arguing that all his assets were seized and any remain money was lost to credit card fraud.

Tyukalo faces multiple charges for allegedly running a trafficking ring out of a series of ritzy properties in Washington.

However, prosecutors alleged in recorded jailhouse calls, Tyukalo instructed someone in Russian to move thousands of dollars out of his bank accounts.



Why we need an El Salvador style gang prison

Inside LA’s most vile gang accused of branding women and kidnapping 14-year-old girls for sex


Los Angeles pimps used “horrific” acts of cruelty to keep a vicelike grip on a sleazy stretch of south LA road where perverts can buy sex with children, and women turn tricks for as little as $40, cops and prosecutors said.

Vile flesh peddlers maintain a thriving sex business on LA’s Figueroa Corridor by branding prostitutes, recruiting girls from foster homes, forcing them to get abortions, and even biting and punching them with Rolex watches, authorities said.

The sickening sex trade secrets of the infamous Hoover Criminals gang’s brutal prostitution ring were revealed in a massive takedown of the Hoovers that saw the arrest of at least ten prostitution kingpins operating in the Figueroa Corridor, an area known to locals as “the Blade.”

Hoover sex traffickers branded their victims, prosecutors said. Obtained by CA Post
Alleged Hoover members. Obtained by CA Post

“This is how they accomplish the sex trafficking in Figueroa,” explained LA’s top prosecutor Bill Essayli after Wednesday’s takedown, dubbed Operation Broken Blade