Saturday, March 14, 2026

Gun thug busted for peddling stolen Glock to Old Dominion killer for measly $100 profit: feds

Gun thug busted for peddling stolen Glock to Old Dominion killer for measly $100 profit: feds


A Virginia man was busted Friday for swiping a gun from a car and peddling it for a measly $100 profit to Mohamed Jalloh — who then used it in the Old Dominion University terror shooting, authorities said.

Accused illicit gun-seller Kenya Chapman even pulled out a $100 bill to show investigators that’s what he made on the transaction, although he claimed he had no idea the Jalloh was already a felon convicted of a past terror-related crime, according to court papers.



Another candidate for that special place in Hell and may he go there sooner rather than later

Florida father accused of shaking and spanking five-week-old daughter to death


‘Schoolboy’ charged with groping nine 11th grade classmates is exposed as adult illegal migrant released under Biden


‘Schoolboy’ charged with groping nine 11th grade classmates is exposed as adult illegal migrant released under Biden

An 18-year-old illegal immigrant from El Salvador allegedly groped 12 female classmates at a Virginia high school — and was allowed into the US under the Biden administration.

Israel Flores Ortiz, who is almost 19 but a junior at Fairfax High School, has been charged with nine counts of assault and battery after he was accused of repeatedly creeping up behind the students in crowded hallways and grabbing them between the legs.

Ortiz, who entered the country illegally in 2024, was released under a federal government policy during the Biden administration, according to local outlet 7News.

Illegal immigrant Israel Flores Ortiz, 18, allegedly groped 12 female classmates at a Virginia high school. Fairfax County Sheriff’s Office


Treasury Department Shutting Down Sham Charities That Funnel Money to Hamas

Bessent: Treasury Department Shutting Down Sham Charities That Funnel Money to Hamas


The Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) announced Thursday that it has determined four sham charities are directly bankrolling Hamas’s military wing and enabling its operations.

According to the Treasury Department, Hamas is hiding its revenue-generating activities behind civilian organizations, under the guise of humanitarian work, to support the group’s terrorist activities.

Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent was quoted in a press release yesterday, saying,  “Hamas continues to finance its military wing by exploiting sham charities to support terrorist operations. The Treasury Department will not allow Hamas to misuse the charitable sector for its violent aims, and we will continue to target these networks wherever they operate.”

Four separate charities are accused of channeling cash to the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, which are suspected of carrying out some of the group’s most heinous terrorist activities.

The Treasury Department said that yesterday’s designations build upon multiple previous OFAC actions against Hamas’s global network of sham charities and denounced Hamas’s continued reliance on organizations that prey on donors’ sympathies to transfer large sums of money that end up prolonging the suffering of Palestinians.

Sanctions were announced against Ghazi Destek Dernegi (GDD), Hayat Yolu, and Palestinian White Hands—as well as the Indonesia-based Komite Nasional Untuk Rakyat Palestina (KNRP).

The goals of those sanctions include freezing any U.S. assets or transactions, blocking American dealings with the designated entities, and protecting the U.S. financial system from terror financing.

Principal Deputy Spokesperson for the U.S. State Department, Thomas “Tommy” Pigott, stated in a press release yesterday, “The Trump Administration will continue to use all available tools to expose and end the deceitful practices that these entities and individuals use to raise funds that support terror networks.”

Pigott added, “We are committed to ensuring that humanitarian aid can be delivered by reliable and safe organizations and to supporting international efforts to advance legitimate Palestinian interests and lasting peace in the region.”

The Daily Wire reports that Hamas was first designated by the U.S. as a Foreign Terrorist Organization in 2001 and said that yesterday’s enforcement was conducted under Executive Order 13224, which targets terrorists and those providing them with material support.

Islamists are an existential threat to everyone else

Syria's Christian Community Faces Increased Persecution


AP Photo/Hussein Malla

The process of Syria’s radical Islamization and the vulnerability of Christians is ongoing at full speed. Jihadist indoctrination now starts at a very early age, including at kindergartens. Six-year-old girls at “Dar Al-Wahy” school in the city of Homs were recently recorded chanting during their morning assembly, “Welcome to death for the sake of Allah!”

The X account Greco-Levantines Worldwide reported on 17 February:

We are receiving almost daily videos of children marching in Damascus and chanting slogans widely recognized as jihadist — including phrases meaning, “I will make myself ammunition.” These chants are consistently directed at Christians and Jews.

Since the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024, jihadist Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS)-led forces have largely controlled Syria. This is an Islamic terrorist group with roots in Al-Qaeda and ISIS (Islamic State). 

Syria has since seen a sharp increase in violence, including the murder of Christians and attacks on churches. Christians are often targeted for theft, extortion, and kidnapping.  

Eli Najjar Taqla, a 21-year-old Antiochian Greek Christian from Muhardeh, was shot on 1 February. His murder has deepened fears among Syria’s Christian communities. His death is not seen as an isolated incident, but rather as part of growing concerns over insecurity and the spread of weapons in the country.

Bashar Elias, an Antiochian Greek from Ma’rouneh, was kidnapped on 4 February in front of his family. His brother and sister were beaten when they tried to defend him. His fate remains unknown.

Social pressure and the rise of jihad significantly restrict the freedom of Christians in education, clothing choices, social interactions, and worship. On 1 February, before Sunday Mass, a young man carrying a Quran entered the Melkite Greek Cathedral of Al Zaitoun (the Patriarchate headquarters). He chanted “Allahu Akbar” and recited Quranic verses. Such abuses are persistent because they are now protected by both the country's new regime and constitution. The new interim constitution, proclaimed in March 2025, stipulates that Islamic law is the primary source of legislation. It further lacks sufficient protection for minorities. 

At the same time, attacks against other religious minorities by the HTS regime and affiliated militias in March and July 2025 primarily affected Alawites and Druze, although Christians also suffered casualties. Hundreds of Alawite and Druze women were abducted and sexually assaulted. Some Alawite women were taken as sex slaves.  

Meanwhile, Syrian education is being reformed according to Islamic teachings. These reforms are eliminating pre-Islamic history and gender equality and incorporating Quranic verses that negatively reference Jews and Christians, fostering hostility. It is obvious that this is an effort to Islamize education and redefine Syrian identity.

In October 2025, Syria held tightly controlled indirect parliamentary elections through regional electoral colleges, resulting in minimal minority representation. Only one Christian was elected

Meanwhile, terrorist attacks against churches in the country are ongoing. On 18 December 2024, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese in Hama was attacked by Islamic gunmen. Church property and religious symbols (crosses) were destroyed, a nearby Christian cemetery desecrated, and graves vandalized.

On 22 June 2025, a suicide attack on the Mar Elias Greek Orthodox Church in Damascus murdered 30 Christians during the church service, wounded 54, and caused severe damage to the historic church building. The vulnerability of Christians in the country largely stems from their lack of political and military power today. However, Syria is a foundational cradle of Christianity, with roots stretching back to the first century. Its history notably features the conversion of St. Paul on the road to Damascus and the naming of followers of Jesus as "Christians" in the city of Antioch. Syria was a major center for early Christian theology, with diverse communities such as Greeks, Armenians, and Assyrians. Syrian Christianity preserved the use of Aramaic, the language of Jesus, with many ancient liturgies still in use today. 

The Arab invasion of Eastern Roman (Greek Byzantine) Syria in the seventh century was a pivotal campaign by the Rashidun Caliphate that shattered Christian Byzantine control in the Levant. Keyed by victories like the Battle of Yarmouk in 636, the Arab jihadist forces invaded and captured major cities including Damascus and Jerusalem from Byzantine forces. They massacred many natives, raped women, and converted churches into mosques. As a result, the Levant, which was then majority-Christian, became part of the rapidly expanding Islamic caliphate, fundamentally changing the demographic and religious landscape of the region.

Since gaining independence from the French mandate in 1946, Syria has faced political instability, military coups, and conflict. The Assad family ruled the country for over 50 years, from 1970 until December 2024. The Assad regime fell when HTS-affiliated forces led by the former leader of Syrian al-Qaeda, Abu Mohammad al-Julani/Ahmed al-Sharaa, captured Damascus. Since the fall of Assad, Islamic oppression (already the leading cause of persecution) has intensified. 

The greatest pressure against Christians in the country currently occurs in Damascus and Aleppo, where – despite the cities’ historic Christian presence – growing hostility from Muslim communities, the HTS-led regime, and other terrorist groups has fostered discrimination and danger. Other hard-hit areas include the city of Idlib and some northern zones under Turkish influence and occupation, as well as ISIS cells, where displacement and human rights abuses prevail. 

In central Syria, such as Homs and the Wadi al-Nasara (the Valley of Christians) area, persecution is also severe. On 24 February, Iman Georges, a Christian teacher and mother from Homs, was shot and murderedby a Muslim man. 

Syria ranks 6th in the World Watch List of Open Doors that monitors global Christian persecution. According to Open Doors' latest summary report on Syria:

Christians face conversion pressure, attacks on churches, social pressure to wear headscarves, the removal of Christian symbols, and verbal intimidation. Religious and political freedoms are being curtailed through repression, surveillance, control of churches, and the arrest of critical activists to maintain absolute authority.

Historical Christian communities—with the Orthodox as the largest, followed by Melkite Catholics—face increasing pressure from both the current regime and extremist groups. Challenges include bureaucratic delays affecting activities or renovations, constant surveillance, and targeted threats against religious leaders and churches. Churches are subjected to insults, bombings, and intimidation, including leaflets demanding conversion or jizya. 

Baptist, Evangelical, and Pentecostal congregations face significant pressure due to limited legal recognition, perceived Western orientation, evangelistic activities among Muslims, and admitting Muslim converts, making them vulnerable to closure, surveillance, and restrictions. 

 Women from religious minority groups, including Christians, risk abduction, sexual harassment, and rape by radical groups and individuals. Field sources report that threats, attempted (sexual) assaults, and the fear of abduction persist, particularly during clashes and in unstable areas. A country expert noted that 'there are hardly any safe spaces for women and girls,' highlighting their exposure to sexual violence at checkpoints, workplaces, and on public transportation. Cultural stigmas and the fear of reprisals deter victims from reporting assaults.Despite all these, both the U.S. government and the European Council decided to lift the economic sanctions on Syria in 2025. Eiad Herera, spokesperson of the Antiochian Greek Organization, told PJ Media:

Violence presented as isolated incidents, as the Syrian authorities claim, is simply another face of massacres and of the policy of displacement and intimidation pursued to impose a religious identity and carry out social engineering based on a single, exclusionary identity. 

There must be clear and strict mechanisms to ensure the enforcement of the conditions for the lifting of sanctions. Christians and other minorities are very vulnerable now: unarmed, no media, no Western support. They are literally left at the mercy of Julani and his Al Qaeda militias.


How Gov Shapiro became a squatter and got sued by his neighbor

Poet Robert Frost once said that "good fences make good neighbors." He apparently never met Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, who is being sued by his neighbors for effectively squatting on their land and then seizing it to install a fence along his $830,500 private residence in suburban Philadelphia. The litigation is likely to put Shapiro in a much different light for many who think of him as a 2028 contender.

President Joe Biden and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro in 2023

US President Joe Biden looks on as Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro delivers remarks following a briefing on Interstate-95 highway emergency repair and reconstruction efforts, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on June 17, 2023.(JULIA NIKHINSON/AFP via Getty Images))

The irony of the case is crushing. Shapiro opposed Trump's plan to build a wall along the southern border, declaring that he would sue before a dime of Pennsylvania money went to pay for it. He apparently adopted a similar approach to his neighbors in Pennsylvania. The difference is that he built the wall, but without giving his neighbors a dime.

Shapiro has long wanted a 2,900-square-foot parcel of land located between the two homes in Abington, Montgomery County. The problem is that his neighbors like their land and want to keep it. They turned down multiple offers from Shapiro.That is when the governor decided to build it anyway.

GIVE THE GOVERNMENT AN INCH AND THEY'LL SEIZE YOUR $200K HOME FOR A $2K DEBT

Jeremy and Simone Mock allege that Shapiro effectively became a squatter by using the state police to bar them from their own property and then building an eight-foot security fence.

After the Mocks sued, Shapiro countersued, claiming that the land was now his through "adverse possession." He basically claimed that they abandoned the land despite their repeatedly trying to gain entry and repeatedly turning down his offers to buy it.

Welcome to the world of adverse possession. It is a doctrine dating back to 2000 B.C., and the Code of Hammurabi, allowing people to acquire title to land abandoned by owners over a long period of time. A really long time.

From the Romans to the British to the earliest days of the American Republic, adverse possession has been recognized as a valid means of acquiring title. In the United States. It was particularly valuable after people acquired or claimed vast tracts of land out West, only to leave them undeveloped and unoccupied. As settlers moved West, they often cultivated the land, built structures, and lived openly for years before the original owners reclaimed it. Adverse possession was an efficient rule that allowed land to be put to productive use.

Under Pennsylvania law, you must prove actual, continuous, exclusive, visible, notorious, distinct and hostile possession of the land for 21 years.  Shapiro clearly has the hostile part down, but the Mocks are claiming that he effectively used state police to bar them from their land and then claimed that they abandoned it.

Each side is portraying the other as dishonest and opportunistic.

In their complaint, the Mocks allege that the Shapiros made "previous acknowledgments that the Mock Property was owned by no one other than the Mocks." They document that the Shapiros did not want to pay the asking price, so the Mocks offered to lease the land to them. The Shapiros allegedly agreed but then backed out.

MICHIGAN FAMILY SAYS COUNTY SEIZED HOME OVER TAX BILL THEY DIDN’T OWE — CASE NOW HEADS TO THE SUPREME COURT

The Mocks declare, "what followed was an outrageous abuse of power by the sitting Governor of Pennsylvania and its former Attorney General." Shapiro declared the property was his.

The Mocks objected that they had been paying taxes to the state on the disputed property for nine years.

The Shapiros claim that from 2003 to 2025, they mowed the lawn, cleared leaves, and removed other debris from the land as if it were their own. Accordingly, they claim that the 21-year period has passed and with it the title to the land. They further allege that, after buying the property in April 2017, the Mocks did not claim the land or challenge the location of an existing fence. However, they did so in October 2025.

Shapiro maintains that the Mocks never even knew the property was theirs until he informed them of the results of a recent survey.

The fascinating element is the use of state troopers to keep the Mocks off their land. The complaint even shows a picture of two troopers, stating, "these members of the State Police are on the Mock Property. Behind the officers are the arborvitae that the Shapiros planted on the Mock Property without permission and over the Mocks’ express objections."

With the required 21 years only barely passed, any period in which the Mocks contested the possession could unravel the adverse possession claim. In the meantime, few people are likely to be sympathetic with the Shapiros taking property from a neighbor. Adverse possession rarely sits well with people, but it is more palatable when the owner has been absent and dilatory.

Here, the owners are very much present and vocal.

The optics are also worsened by the fact that the state has been struggling to address a squatting crisis where people occupy other people's homes and then refuse to leave during years of litigation. Shapiro is accused of being a squatter with a state trooper contingent to back him up. It is not clear what would be worse for Shapiro to lose or to win in taking his neighbor’s property without compensation.

The dispute has already made its way into the political arena, where Shapiro is running for reelection. One of his opponents, Stacy Garrity, posted a Valentine’s Day message on social media with Shapiro’s face that said: "I love you more than I love my neighbor’s yard."

The fact is that there are credible arguments on both sides of this dispute. For Shapiro, the question is whether he can afford to win.