Sunday, June 14, 2026

Safety in prisons


California prison worker sues over vicious attack as she shows her life-altering injuries

A California prison kitchen supervisor is suing after she was allegedly attacked inside a walk-in freezer by an inmate in a violent incident that prosecutors say left her with life-altering injuries.

The alleged assault happened on Aug. 10, 2025 inside the kitchen freezer at the California Institute for Men in Chino, according to claims presented at a news conference connected to the lawsuit.

Attorneys allege the inmate, who was serving time for assault with a deadly weapon, attempted to sexually assault the supervisor before stabbing her in the neck.

A woman with a stitched laceration and scratches on her neck, lying in a hospital bed.

“There’s really no words that can describe what happened. I thought I lost my sister,” the victim’s sister said at a press conference.

Lawyers say the inmate should never have been assigned to work in the kitchen, where he allegedly had access to knives and other dangerous tools.

The alleged assault happened on Aug. 10, 2025 inside the kitchen freezer at the California Institute for Men in Chino.

Attorney Denisse Gastelum said the placement decision put staff at unnecessary risk and should have been prevented.

Gastelum also blasted prison staff, accusing a correctional officer of failing to monitor the encounter despite being warned that the supervisor and inmate would be entering an isolated area together.

“Letting him know, hey, I’m going to go into the freezer now with this prisoner. Watch me, have my back, supervise me. None of which he did,” Gastelum said at the press conference.

Sign for the California Institution for Men, State Prison Chino Alamy Stock Photo
A corrections officer walks past a California Institution for Men sign, a guard tower, and barbed wire fences. Corbis via Getty Images

The lawsuit alleges that when the attack began, it wasn’t prison staff who rushed to help — it was fellow inmates.

“I want to make sure that we are clear on this. It was other prisoners that had to come to Jane Doe’s rescue while the correctional officer stayed there neglecting his duties,” Gastelum said.

Attorney Toni Jaramilla questioned why the inmate was assigned to work in the kitchen in the first place and why additional safeguards were not in place.

“Why was it that a known felon who attacks women was placed in an area where there are kitchen tools with knives and other weapons,” Jaramilla said at the presser. “Why was he placed there?”





How do the marginally literate get into Berkeley?

If Berkeley students can’t read, K-12 schools need remediation




Jew hatred

Unhinged California raisin heir arrested after antisemitic terror campaign against rabbi neighbor



Media guilty of disinformation

Assistant US Attorney in Calif. blasts LA Times for calling homeless voter fraud cases 'unfounded'

The Los Angeles Times report noted that no evidence of widespread voter fraud occurred in the city, but that a few homeless people on Skid Row were paid to register to vote and sign ballot petitions.

Remember politicians produce nothing of value

The Commissar’s Plans to Steal Elon Musk’s Wealth

Elon Musk is now the world’s first trillionaire. And the socialists burrowed in our government can’t stand it.

SpaceX went public this week and, in doing so, made Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire.  In the same swoop, Musk also made over 4,000 of his employees millionaires.

Elon and his employees don’t have that money in a bank.  Much of it exists in stock options.  What no one can argue is that Elon created more millionaires in a shorter period of time than anyone else in history.

This should have been a moment of celebration for Americans.  Musk is a citizen, and his stunning success should have been an inspiration for a generation of potential innovators.  Being number one often drives competitors looking to knock you off your pedestal.  It is the core of capitalism.

Instead, what came out of the woodwork were a few of the seven deadly sins — namely, greed, lust, and wrath. 

One segment of the population attempted to diminish Musk’s accomplishment by claiming that it isn’t fair that he has that amount of money.  The more moronic masses went with “That’s too much money for anyone to have.”  They went out of their way to gloss over his long list of historic technological accomplishments.  In case you’ve forgotten, here’s the highlight reel:

  • Co-founded Paypal, which ushered in online shopping for the world.
  • Reinvented the electric car industry.
  • Innovated energy storage.
  • Was a key introducer of vehicles driving themselves.
  • Built SpaceX.
  • Created reusable spacecraft.
  • Created Starlink, which expanded the internet around the world.
  • Saved free speech online with his purchase and realignment of X.
  • Introduced Grok (A.I.).
  • Even rescued the trapped astronauts in the ISS.

Elon employs roughly 160,000 people around the planet.  His innovations touch every aspect of our society.  To be blunt, he’s Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, Ben Franklin, and Alexander Graham Bell, all rolled into one.

For the left 'by any means necessary' is not just a slogan

Dems’ dirty donation platform shows they don’t give a damn about clean elections



Last week exposed the utter hypocrisy of Democrats who scream about “free and fair elections” and demand that we get dark money out of politics.

Specifically, the House Administration Committee shined a spotlight on the Dems’ major fund-raising platform, ActBlue, and its apparent efforts to end-run the federal laws that Dems insist are all about “clean campaigns.”

The Justice Department is investigating ActBlue’s role in the use of straw donors to launder illegal giving;  a larger federal probe is looking into the platform’s alleged efforts to help funnel illegal foreign donations to Democratic candidates.

ActBlue CEO Regina Wallace-Jones appeared Wednesday to answer questions about how her company abetted illegal donations — only to repeatedly plead the Fifth.

A terrible look, but probably wise, since she gave false testimony to the same committee in 2023.

ActBlue’s record is filthy: For years, it failed to follow basic security procedures (like requiring 3-digit CVV numbers on credit cards), leading its own internal anti-fraud team to sound the alarm — leaving huge loopholes for, in the company’s own words, “a big attack where each individual donation fell below the [fraud review] threshold.” 


A 2023 House analysis of more than 200 million FEC records of ActBlue-processed “giving” found hundreds of small donations from the same individual, donations in amounts far greater than the donor could afford, and unusually frequent donations from elderly people or first-time contributors — all telltale signs of “smurfing,” or using fake info to give illegally to campaigns.

That prompted the House committee to ask Wallace-Jones how secure her platform really was: She insisted, “our approach is multilayered, with checks and confirmations occurring throughout the donation process” to “root out potential foreign contributions, and protect donors from financial fraud.”

That was three years ago — and it was false when she said it, per an investigation conducted last year by law firm Covington and Burling.

 A Democratic superlawyer and ex-Obama official, Dana Remus, was Covington’s point person on that probe; Obama-era Attorney General Eric Holder is a senior counsel at the firm. This wasn’t about partisanship.

Wallace-Jones’ false testimony to Congress “presents a substantial risk for ActBlue,” the investigation found. The CEO’s response? To fire Covington, even as senior-level lawyers and other top people within ActBlue headed for the hills. 

Meanwhile, the company lowered its already-lax standards for the 2024 election cycle — not once but twice, to let hundreds of illegal donations from foreign nationals flow through, and missing more than 6% of fraud (at the most conservative estimate). 

Pretty bold, when Wallace-Jones knew she was under federal scrutiny.

Democrats should be up in arms about this crooked setup; they’ve spent the past decade screaming about election integrity — and yelling about the pernicious power of money in politics for even longer. 

Hah! Dems at Wednesday’s hearing dismissed the investigation as just a partisan attack, with serial liar Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md) droning, “This hearing is part of a political vengeance and vendetta campaign.”

Rep. Terri Sewell (D-Ala.) saw racism at work: “Over and over again, Donald Trump’s Department of Justice has harassed Black women with bogus lawsuits.”

Yes, Wallace-Jones is black — but it’s the Democrats who chose to make her the face of ActBlue, the source of the stink. (Did they hire her expressly so they could play the race card when ActBlue got caught?)


If Democrats actually gave a damn about the crisis of public trust, they’d be the ones hammering ActBlue into oblivion. 

Instead, they’re running interference for it — fresh proof that, for all their lip service about clean politics, all the Dems really care about is power.





What to know about the Ohio Organizing Collaborative after FBI searches

What to know about the Ohio Organizing Collaborative after FBI searches


The Ohio Organizing Collaborative is a key part of the state’s progressive political infrastructure, playing leading roles in voter registration drives and ballot issue campaigns.

The Ohio Organizing Collaborative is a nonpartisan organization, but works closely with Democrats on issues like voter registration, political organizing and ballot-issue campaigns.

The group was founded in 2007 and has since grown to be one of the most well-funded political organizing operations in the state. The OOC and its political arm, the Ohio Organizing Campaign, together received nearly $55 million from 2020-2024, according to the organizations’ public tax filings for the most recent years available.





Tolerance in Communist and Muslim countries

5 countries where Christians face brutal persecution — and how you can help




"Remember those who are in prison, as though in prison with them."

For American Christians, biblical accounts of martyrdom can seem far removed from everyday life. And yet some 388 million Christians worldwide face high levels of persecution or discrimination — from imprisonment and government surveillance to mob violence and social exclusion — for practicing their religion.

Christ never promised his followers a life free from suffering; the New Testament repeatedly warns that persecution is part of the Christian experience. Yet Scripture couples that warning with a command: Christians are not to forget their fellow believers who suffer for the faith.

Few Christians in the United States or Europe will ever face the kinds of pressures endured by believers in North Korea, Nigeria, Pakistan, China, or Armenia.

"Remember those who are in prison, as though in prison with them, and those who are mistreated, since you also are in the body" (Hebrews 13:3).

Christians today do respond in many ways, from prayer and advocacy to humanitarian aid and legal assistance. Here are five places where believers face significant challenges in 2026 — and five organizations working on the front lines to support them.

1. North Korea

North Korea remains one of the most dangerous places in the world to follow Christ. While North Korea's constitution formally guarantees freedom of religion and the government permits a small number of state-controlled churches, independent Christian activity is treated as a threat to the regime. Believers caught with a Bible or participating in unauthorized worship can face imprisonment, forced labor, or worse. In some cases, punishment extends to entire families under the country's system of collective responsibility.

Organization helping: Open Doors

Founded by the Dutch missionary known as Brother Andrew, Open Doors has spent decades serving Christians living under persecution. The ministry is best known for its annual World Watch List, which tracks countries where Christians face the most severe restrictions.

North Korea again ranked at the top of this year's installment. The organization supports underground believers through networks operating outside the country, assists defectors, and helps document conditions that would otherwise remain hidden from the outside world.

Open Doors recently published the story of a North Korean Christian who spent more than a decade imprisoned because of his faith before being released. The testimony provided a rare firsthand account from inside the country and reflected the organization's broader work supporting underground believers and documenting religious persecution that is otherwise difficult to verify from outside North Korea.

2. Nigeria

Nigeria remains one of the deadliest countries in the world for Christians. Islamist extremist groups, armed militants, and recurring attacks on villages have left thousands dead and displaced countless families in recent years. In May, suspected Fulani militants killed five people and abducted several others in attacks on Christian communities in Plateau State, highlighting the persistent insecurity facing many believers.

Organization helping: International Christian Concern

Based in Washington, D.C., International Christian Concern focuses on advocacy, reporting, and direct assistance for persecuted Christians worldwide.

In April 2025, ICC reported that more than 300 Christians had been killed in Nigeria in just over three months. The organization has consistently documented attacks on churches and Christian villages while advocating greater international attention to the crisis.

Last month, ICC released "Nigeria's $10 Million Genocide Cover-Up," a report alleging that government officials and international actors have obscured the religious dimensions of violence that has killed tens of thousands of Nigerian Christians over the past two decades.

3. Pakistan

In Pakistan, an accusation of blasphemy against Islam can upend a person's life long before a verdict is reached. Christians have frequently found themselves among those targeted under the country's controversial blasphemy laws, while recent investigations have raised concerns about organized networks that allegedly fabricate accusations and profit from the resulting prosecutions.

Organization helping: Voice of the Martyrs

Voice of the Martyrs was founded in 1967 by Romanian pastor Richard Wurmbrand, who spent 14 years imprisoned by the communist regime for his Christian faith before escaping to the West and launching a ministry dedicated to serving persecuted believers.

Because many of the Christians it serves live in dangerous environments, the organization often withholds names and identifying details from public reports.

In September 2025, Voice of the Martyrs Radio featured Pakistani Christian scholar Dr. Yousaf Sadiq discussing efforts to preserve and distribute the Punjabi Psalter, a collection of Scripture-based worship songs used by Christians in Pakistan. The project was presented as one way of strengthening believers living under pressure. VOM has also highlighted cases involving Christians accused under Pakistan's blasphemy laws and encouraged prayer for imprisoned believers.

4. China

Unlike North Korea, China does not ban Christianity outright. Instead, the government seeks to control it. Churches are expected to submit to state oversight, religious leaders face pressure to promote Communist Party priorities, and believers who resist can find themselves under surveillance or behind bars.

Organization helping: Aid to the Church in Need

Aid to the Church in Need is a Catholic pontifical foundation that supports clergy, seminarians, religious communities, and Christian families in countries facing hardship or persecution.

Like many ministries operating in sensitive regions, ACN does not always disclose detailed information about beneficiaries or projects in countries where publicity could place local Christians at risk.

This year, Aid to the Church in Need spotlighted the case of Jimmy Lai, the imprisoned Hong Kong Catholic publisher and pro-democracy activist serving a 20-year sentence under Hong Kong's national security law. Through interviews with Lai's family and its "Faith Under Siege" podcast, ACN has helped keep international attention focused on one of the world's most prominent Christian prisoners of conscience.



5. Armenia

Armenia is one of the world's oldest Christian nations and the first kingdom to adopt Christianity as its official religion. But recent disputes between the government and the Armenian Apostolic Church have prompted warnings from religious-freedom advocates who say one of Christianity's oldest institutions faces mounting political pressure.

Unlike North Korea, Nigeria, or Pakistan, the concern in Armenia is not mass violence against Christians but an increasingly contentious relationship between the state and the church that has shaped Armenian identity for more than 1,700 years.

Organization helping: Christian Solidarity International

Christian Solidarity International, a Switzerland-based human rights organization, advocates on behalf of persecuted religious minorities around the world.

In 2026, CSI conducted a fact-finding mission in Armenia, where its delegation met with imprisoned Archbishop Bagrat Galstanyan after negotiating access with Armenian authorities. The group later delivered letters from the archbishop to participants at the International Religious Freedom Summit in Washington, released a report on alleged state persecution of the Armenian Apostolic Church, and urged Western governments to raise concerns about detained clergy and religious freedom in Armenia.

Remembering the forgotten church

Few Christians in the United States or Europe will ever face the kinds of pressures endured by believers in North Korea, Nigeria, Pakistan, China, or Armenia. Yet their stories serve as a reminder of both the cost of discipleship and the fragility of religious freedom in a fallen world. They also challenge Christians elsewhere not to forget their brothers and sisters in Christ.

As the Apostle Paul reminded the early Church, "If one member suffers, all suffer together; if one member is honored, all rejoice together" (1 Corinthians 12:26).