Tuesday, March 03, 2026

LITTLE MARCO CLAIMS HE WAS THE VICTIM OF A BAD VIDEO CLIPPING JOB ..... WATCH OUT FOR SHIT DROPPING FROM THE FLYING PIGS

Marco Rubio makes astounding U-turn after Trump claims he 'might've' forced Israel to strike Iran

 

By Jon Michael Raasch 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 3, 2026

 

 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed he was the victim of a bad video clipping job, and that he did not say on Monday that Israel's planned strikes on Iran forced the US to strike the country preemptively

Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed he was the victim of a bad video clipping job, and that he did not say on Monday that Israel's planned strikes on Iran forced the US to strike the country preemptively

 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed the media misunderstood his comments indicating that the 'imminent threat' prompting the US to strike Iran was a pre-planned strike by Israel

Rubio, speaking to reporters on Capitol Hill before a closed-door Senate briefing on Iran Tuesday, said he was the victim of a bad clipping job and that he never indicated that Israel forced the US to strike Iran preemptively. 

'I told you this had to happen anyway,' Rubio said. 'The President made a decision, and the decision he made was that Iran was not going to be allowed to hide behind its ballistic missile program, that Iran was not going to be allowed to hide behind its ability to conduct these attacks.'

'That's what I said yesterday, and you guys need to play it. If you're going to play these statements, you need to play the whole statement, not flip it to reach a narrative that you want to,' he added.

The response was a U-turn from his comments to reporters on Capitol Hill the day before, when he indicated that impending Israeli strikes on Iran would result in a counterattack on US soldiers - an expectation that worried Trump and top officials.

On Monday, Rubio said, 'We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces,' Rubio said. 

'And we knew that if we didn't preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties.'

President Donald Trump strongly denied that Israel pushed the US into war with Iran on Tuesday, saying that he actually might've pressured the Israelis into action, a likely impetus for Rubio's head-spinning reversal. 

 

'We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces,' Rubio said on Monday. 'And we knew that if we didn't preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties'

'We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces,' Rubio said on Monday. 'And we knew that if we didn't preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties'

Part of the administration's consideration to attack Iran was the possibility of US soldiers getting targeted in Iran's counterattacks should the country come under attack, Rubio said Monday

Part of the administration's consideration to attack Iran was the possibility of US soldiers getting targeted in Iran's counterattacks should the country come under attack, Rubio said Monday

 

'No, I might have forced their hand,' he stated.

Rubio's admission on Monday enraged both Democrats and Republicans.  

'Secretary Rubio says the quiet part out loud: this is an unnecessary war of choice,' Democratic Congresswoman Sarah Jacobs reacted. 'Israel forced our hand – there was no imminent threat to the United States. And instead of talking Israel out of going to war, President Trump went along with it and put U.S. lives at risk.'

Former Republican Congresswoman and ex-Trump ally Marjorie Taylor Greene told conservative pundit Megyn Kelly that the US strikes on Iran were not MAGA.

'"Make America Great Again" was supposed to be America first, not Israel first, not any foreign country first, not any foreign people first, but the American people first,' Greene said. 

White House officials posted repeatedly about Rubio's Monday remarks on Tuesday, combatting claims that the US was pressured into attacking because of Israel's planned strikes. 

'No, Marco Rubio Didn’t Claim That Israel Dragged Trump into War with Iran,' White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote Tuesday morning. 

The four-day conflict has seen thousands of US and Israeli strikes within Iran. On the offensive's first day, the US-Israel coalition killed Iran's longtime leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and around 40 top military and political officials. 

 

Smoke rises from central Tehran following reported US and Israeli strikes on Tuesday

Smoke rises from central Tehran following reported US and Israeli strikes on Tuesday

 

In response to the US-Israeli attack, Iran has since launched myriad ballistic missiles and drones at American bases in the region. Iran has also targeted its closest neighbors. 

On Tuesday, a CIA outpost in the US embassy in Saudi Arabia was hit by an Iranian strike. It is unclear if any CIA agents or personnel were wounded in the attack.

The Qatari Ministry of Defense has confirmed that the country was targeted by two ballistic missiles launched by Iran on Tuesday. One of the drones struck the Al-Udeid Air Base, which hosts US forces, and the other was intercepted.

Israel, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and Oman have also been struck by Iran in recent days. 

IRAN CONTINUES TO STRIKE BACK

Iran strikes CIA base in Saudi Arabia in huge symbolic victory as spy agency arms Islamic militants to spark uprising

 

By Phillip Nieto and Adam Pogrund 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 3, 2026

 

 

The US embassy headquarters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia is photographed Tuesday after it was hit by suspected Iranian drone strikes. The Washington Post reported that the CIA station located at the embassy was blown up

The US embassy headquarters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia is photographed Tuesday after it was hit by suspected Iranian drone strikes. The Washington Post reported that the CIA station located at the embassy was blown up

 

Iran has blown up a CIA station at the US Embassy in Saudi Arabia as the agency works to arm militants for an uprising against the Islamic regime.

A suspected Iranian drone struck the CIA station in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia's capital, on Monday, just two days after the spy agency pinpointed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's location in the strike that killed him.

An internal State Department alert revealed that Tehran's attack 'collapsed' part of the station's roof and 'contaminated' the compound with smoke, according to the Washington Post.

The station also sustained 'structural damage' while personnel were advised to 'shelter in place.' 

The US and Saudi governments confirmed that two drones hit the US embassy complex, but did not disclose that the CIA station was impacted, the Post said.

There was no indication that CIA personnel were wounded.

It came as Iran continued to furiously attack Israel, the US and its allies in Middle East in retaliation for strikes which killed Khamenei.

The US Consulate in Dubai was rocked by a drone strike on Tuesday as a huge explosion lit up the sky.

 

President Donald Trump ordered the launch of 'Operation Epic Fury' starting on Saturday, which has now led to the death of six American troops

President Donald Trump ordered the launch of 'Operation Epic Fury' starting on Saturday, which has now led to the death of six American troops

 

A primitive Shahed drone evaded high-tech defences over the United Arab Emirates and struck a car park adjacent to the consulate, which had been evacuated in advance. 

Two Iranian ballistic missiles also struck Al-Udeid Air Base, the largest US military installation in the Middle East. No casualties were reported.

The effectiveness of the Iranian response to US-Israel bombardment, which began on Saturday with the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has caught the White House off guard. 

Mr Trump has admitted in interviews that the US was not expecting Tehran to lash out against its Gulf neighbours who are not participating in the campaign but who house US bases.   

The CIA has long been viewed by the Islamic regime as its arch-enemy, in part because of the agency's history of covert efforts aimed at undermining its leadership.

The American spy agency and the United Kingdom's MI6 set in motion the 1953 Iranian coup d'état, which led to the overthrow of Iran's democratically elected leader. 

Tehran's attack also comes as the spy agency works to arm Kurdish militants inside the country in an effort to foment an uprising following the ayatollah's death. 

The Daily Mail has contacted the CIA for comment. 

Top White House officials have been in active discussions with Kurdish leaders in Iraq about providing them with military support to strike the regime. 

Iranian Kurdish militants have thousands of soldiers along the Iraq-Iran border with major support in Northern Iraq's Kurdistan region. 

 

Smoke rises from an Israeli strike in Beirut on Tuesday

Smoke rises from an Israeli strike in Beirut on Tuesday

Smoke plumes billow following Israeli bombardment on Beirut's southern suburbs

Smoke plumes billow following Israeli bombardment on Beirut's southern suburbs

Iran's capital of Tehran has been ravaged by US-Israeli airstrikes since Saturday

Iran's capital of Tehran has been ravaged by US-Israeli airstrikes since Saturday

Iran retaliated to the US and Israeli strikes with a barrage of missiles at neighboring nations - some of which broke through air defense systems (seen in Dubai)

Iran retaliated to the US and Israeli strikes with a barrage of missiles at neighboring nations - some of which broke through air defense systems (seen in Dubai) 

Trump¿s war has now spiraled across the Middle East, with Israeli cities and several Gulf allies coming under Iranian drone and missile attacks

Trump's war has now spiraled across the Middle East, with Israeli cities and several Gulf allies coming under Iranian drone and missile attacks

 

An on-ground rebellion could begin in the coming days.

Since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, this semi-autonomous region has served as a haven for local Kurdish groups that pose a military threat to Iran's regime. 

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has targeted these groups with dozens of drone strikes since the start of the war on Saturday.

President Donald Trump on Tuesday reportedly spoke with the president of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan, one of the major Kurdish opposition groups targeted by Tehran's military. 

The Sunni Muslim group has engaged in guerrilla warfare against the Iranian military and the IRGC. 

'Operation Epic Fury' wiped out much of Iran's top leadership over the weekend as part of a joint US–Israeli military campaign aimed at crippling the regime after Trump's diplomatic talks collapsed last week. 

Despite the death of the ayatollah, the Islamic government appears to remain in control of the country. The CIA's reported efforts to arm Kurdish militants could pose one of the most existential threats to the regime.

Meanwhile, Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was reportedly appointed Iran's new Supreme Leader on Tuesday evening. 

Mojtaba, 56, Ali Khamenei's second oldest son, has strong links to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), and was chosen by Iran's Assembly of Experts 'under pressure from the Revolutionary Guards', according to Iranian opposition outlet Iran International. 

Mojtaba is not a high-ranking cleric, has never held office and does not have an official role in the regime.

But he served in the Iranian armed forces during the Iran-Iraq war and is believed to wield considerable influence behind the scenes. He has been touted as a possible successor to his father for years.

However, he was not included in a list of three senior clerics Ali Khamenei reportedly identified last year.

 

Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has reportedly been appointed Iran's new Supreme Leader

Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has reportedly been appointed Iran's new Supreme Leader

Sgt. 1st Class Noah L. Tietjens, 42, of Bellevue, NebraskaSpc. Declan J. Coady, 20, of West Des Moines, lowa
Sgt. 1st Class Noah L. Tietjens, 42, of Bellevue, Nebraska, and Spc. Declan J. Coady, 20, of West Des Moines, lowa were also killed
Capt. Cody A. Khork, 35, of Winter Haven, FloridaSgt. 1st Class Nicole M. Amor, 39, of White Bear Lake, Minnesota
The Pentagon has identified four soldiers killed in a drone strike in Kuwait as Capt. Cody A. Khork, 35, of Winter Haven, Florida (left) and Sgt. 1st Class Nicole M. Amor, 39, of White Bear Lake, Minnesota 
 

And his father is said to have indicated opposition to his candidacy because it would resemble the hereditary rule enacted by the US-backed Shah monarchy before it was overthrown in the Iranian Revolution in 1979.

Father-to-son succession is also viewed negatively in the Shiite Muslim clerical establishment in Iran.

But much of Iran's top brass has been decimated in the latest conflict and Mojtaba has close ties with the powerful IRGC and the Basij volunteer paramilitary force.  

Trump's war has now spiralled across the Middle East, with Israeli cities and several Gulf allies coming under Iranian drone and missile attacks.

The US has responded with a wave of airstrikes aimed at crippling Iran's military bases and remaining leadership. 

American embassies in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the UAE have been struck by drones. The State Department has ordered the departure of non-emergency personnel in response. 

A total of six American troops are dead following the launch of 'Operation Epic Fury, ' while nearly two dozen remain hospitalized from injuries. 

The Pentagon released the names of four of the six service members, saying they died in a drone strike in Kuwait. 

They were Capt Cody Khork, 35, Sgt Noah Tietjens, 42, Sgt Nicole Amor, 39, and Sgt Declan Coady, 20. 

All four were killed when a drone hit a command center in Port Shuaiba, Kuwait on Sunday - just one day after the US and Israel launched its military campaign against Iran, which has launched retaliatory strikes. 

Israel also launched a fresh 'broad wave of strikes' against Iran on Tuesday evening.

After five days of conflict, the US and Israel have struck 1,700 targets inside the country, including missile sites, government buildings, the Iranian state broadcaster, air-defence systems, radar stations and nuclear facilities.

Hospitals, schools and residential buildings were also hit in what was described by those on the ground as ‘an apocalypse’. In its daily update on Tuesday, the humanitarian Iranian Red Crescent Society reported 787 dead across 153 cities.   

The IDF also continued to trade blows with Hezbollah. 

Iranian-backed Hezbollah, who began firing missiles at Israel in response to the ayatollah's death, targeted Haifa's navy base.

Israel hit back and loud explosions were heard across Beirut. 

 

The US Consulate building in Dubai was up in flames after reportedly being struck by an Iranian drone

The US Consulate building in Dubai was up in flames after reportedly being struck by an Iranian drone

Videos posted to social media on Tuesday evening showed a huge plume of smoke rising from the building, which local authorities revealed was hit by a missile

Videos posted to social media on Tuesday evening showed a huge plume of smoke rising from the building, which local authorities revealed was hit by a missile

Smoke and flames rise from vehicles after shrapnel from an Iranian missile strike fell on a parking lot, in Ramat Gan, Israel

Smoke and flames rise from vehicles after shrapnel from an Iranian missile strike fell on a parking lot, in Ramat Gan, Israel

 

It also launched a major ground offensive into southern Lebanon, from where it is understood Iranian-backed terrorists launched a Shahed drone that struck RAF Akrotiri on Cyprus.

Israel said it had deployed troops ‘deeper into southern Lebanon’, beyond positions it occupied at the time of the 2024 ceasefire between its government and Iranian-backed Hezbollah forces.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had authorised the army to advance in order to ‘prevent the possibility of direct fire on Israeli communities’. Last night, the Israeli military said Hezbollah had made ‘a grave mistake’ joining attacks against Israel by its sponsor Iran.

Israel insisted its invasion of Lebanon was strictly for defensive purposes. On Tuesday night, the country was not expected to mount a full invasion of its neighbour, as it did for two months in 2024.

Residents in Israel were warned of ‘cluster bombs’ being sent in their direction by Iran.

After Iranian attacks on US assets and diplomatic buildings within Saudi Arabia, there were reports that the Kingdom is considering joining the US-Israeli offensive.

The US Embassy in Lebanon announced it was closing until further notice. 

Iran also attacked a port in Oman where the UK has a Joint Logistics Support Base and the Fujairah oil terminal in the UAE.

The US consulate in Erbil, northern Iraq was targeted. The US is planning an emergency evacuation of thousands of its citizens from the Middle East, having previously stated it would be for those individuals to ensure their own security. 

The economic effects are already being felt with share prices plunging and oil prices rising.

The Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route which is used to transport around 20 per cent of the world's oil, was forced shut by Iran, who threatened to 'set fire' to passing ships. 

But Trump said the US would provide a military escort to ships 'if necessary... as soon as possible'.

He added: 'No matter what, the United States will ensure the free flow of energy to the world.

 

The US President issued his fresh blast at Sir Keir Starmer while sitting in front of a Churchill bust in the Oval Office

The US President issued his fresh blast at Sir Keir Starmer while sitting in front of a Churchill bust in the Oval Office

 

On Tuesday, Trump also warned those who make up Iran’s depleted leadership that it was ‘too late to talk’.

And US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said: ‘I’m not going to give away the details of our tactical efforts, but the hardest hits are yet to come.

‘The next phase will be even more punishing on Iran than it is right now.’

He later added: ‘Iran is run by lunatics, religious fanatic lunatics.

‘They have an ambition to have nuclear weapons, and they intend to develop those nuclear weapons behind a programme of missiles and drones and terrorism so that the world will not be able to touch them for fear of those things. This is the weakest they’ve ever been. Now is the time to go after them. The President made the decision to go after them.’

Trump also lashed out at British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, saying 'This is not Winston Churchill we are dealing with.'

In comments that  plunged the so-called 'special relationship' into an unprecedented crisis, Mr Trump declared that he was 'not happy' with Sir Keir and accused him of being 'very, very uncooperative'. 

Speaking in the White House, the US President hit out again at Sir Keir's initial decision to block the US using British bases to launch attacks on Tehran.

He also declared the US would cut all ties with Spain after it banned the US from using its shared airbases to launch attacks. 

ROAD RAGE ASSAULTS ARE BECOMING QUITE COMMON

US State Department employee kills woman and dog in vicious road rage stabbing attack that left three others wounded

 

By Melissa Koenig 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 3, 2026

 

 

Jared Llamado, 32, killed a woman and a dog, and wounded three other people in a road rage stabbing attack

Jared Llamado, 32, killed a woman and a dog, and wounded three other people in a road rage stabbing attack

 

A US Foreign Service Officer killed a woman and a dog, and wounded three other people in a road rage stabbing attack over the weekend before he was gunned down by police.

Jared Llamado, 32, attacked the four women in the southbound lanes of Interstate 495 in Fairfax County, Virginia at around 1.20pm on Sunday following what authorities said was a minor traffic collision.

Michele Adams, 39, and Llamado's own dog died as a result of their injuries, WJLA reports.

Dana Bonnell, 36; Mary C Flood, 37; and Heather Miller, 40, were also injured in the stabbing spree before Llamado was shot dead by a Virginia State Police trooper, authorities announced.

Llamado's LinkedIn account shows he has worked as a diplomatic technology officer at the US State Department since September 2024, describing his role as managing the technology infrastructure and underpinning diplomatic operations.

State Department officials have since confirmed Llamado's employment to Fox News Digital, calling him a 'Foreign Service Officer,' and adding: 'We extend our deepest condolences to all those affected by this tragedy.'

Dispatch audio indicated that the situation escalated rapidly following the collision, with a dispatcher reporting that multiple victims were in the roadway.

Disturbing video shared to social media also showed a man with a large knife attacking the victims. 

 

A blurred image of a man holding a knife over a person lying on the ground, highlighted by a red circle. 
Jared Llamado seen on a stabbing spree on I-495 in Fairfax County, Virginia on March 1, 2026.
 
Officials said the attack came after a minor traffic collision on Interstate 495 in Fairfax County, Virginia on Sunday afternoon

Officials said the attack came after a minor traffic collision on Interstate 495 in Fairfax County, Virginia on Sunday afternoon

 

When a trooper then arrived at the scene, Llamado confronted him with a knife, and the officer opened fire in self-defense, Virginia State Police said. 

Llamado was then transported to a local hospital, where he succumbed to his injuries, while the trooper remained unharmed. 

He is now on leave pending the outcome of an investigation into his use of force. 

State Police said they are also investigating the cause of the crash, which closed down the southbound lanes of the major thoroughfare for hours.

Drivers, meanwhile, were left stunned by what had transpired on Washington DC's Beltway.

'There's no reason to pull out a knife,' one man told NBC Washington. 'I mean, what did that solve? Nothing.'

He then lamented that 'it could happen to everybody.'

'Everybody just needs to cool down, calm down,' the driver said. 'There's no need for it.'

Anyone with information about the stabbing spree is asked to contact Virginia State Police. 

BLM LEADERS ARE GOOD AT MISUSING THE GROUP'S FUNDS

Black Lives Matter founder in Illinois caught brawling with female worker who accused him of misusing money

 

By James Gordon 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 3, 2026

 

 

McLemore serves as Founder and Executive Director of Black Lives Matter Lake County. He has previously served 40 days in jail

Clyde McLemore serves as Founder and Executive Director of Black Lives Matter Lake County. He has previously served 40 days in jail

 

A Black Lives Matter founder in Illinois was caught on camera in a violent office confrontation with a female worker who accused him of misusing the organization's money, a report said.

The violent clash erupted into shoving, grabbing and a physical struggle along a corridor at the group's headquarters, according to a police report.

Police in Waukegan, Illinois, were called to the Black Lives Matter Lake County Resource Center on January 12 after reports of a battery involving the group's founder, Clyde J. McLemore, and project manager Nyesha A. Hill.

Surveillance footage and police reports detail a heated confrontation that spiraled into a physical fight between the two inside McLemore's office. 

Both said the fight came following a dispute about money.

According to a police report obtained by the Lake and McHenry County Scanner, McLemore told responding officers that Hill stormed into his office while he was working on his computer and began demanding money and cigarettes.

He said he told her that he had neither and asked her to leave.

Body-camera footage shows McLemore telling officers that the organization 'ain't got no money,' adding that funds from a grant had already been spent.

 

Black Lives Matter Lake County founder Clyde McLemore was involved in a physical fight with project manager Nyesha A. Hill at the group¿s Waukegan, Illinois office

Black Lives Matter Lake County founder Clyde McLemore was involved in a physical fight with project manager Nyesha A. Hill at the group’s Waukegan, Illinois office

Surveillance video from the Black Lives Matter Lake County Resource Center shows McLemore and Hill grappling with each other in a corridor inside the building

Surveillance video from the Black Lives Matter Lake County Resource Center shows McLemore and Hill grappling with each other in a corridor inside the building

Black Lives Matter Lake County founder Clyde McLemore is seen giving his side of the story to officers from the Waukegan Police

Black Lives Matter Lake County founder Clyde McLemore is seen giving his side of the story to officers from the Waukegan Police

 

'That money is gone,' McLemore said in the footage, referring to the grant.

McLemore told police he put on his jacket to leave the office when the situation escalated.

According to the police report, he said Hill grabbed him by the hood and struck him in the face, setting off a struggle between the two.

The pair began pushing and shoving each other around the office before McLemore ultimately called 911.

Officers observed that McLemore had visible injuries, including a scratch on his forehead and lip.

Despite the injuries, he told police he did not want to press charges.

When officers interviewed Hill, she gave a sharply different version of events - one that centered on allegations about the organization's finances.

Hill told police she works for McLemore as a project manager and had gone into his office to ask why she had not been paid.

 

Project manager Nyesha A. Hill told officers she confronted McLemore about why she had not been paid for her work

Project manager Nyesha A. Hill told officers she confronted McLemore about why she had not been paid for her work

The footage captures the two shoving and grabbing each other as the dispute spills out of an office and into the hallway. Here, Hill managed to get McLemore on the floor

The footage captures the two shoving and grabbing each other as the dispute spills out of an office and into the hallway. Here, Hill managed to get McLemore on the floor

At one point in the corridor confrontation, the pair can be seen pushing each other backward and forward during the struggle

At one point in the corridor confrontation, the pair can be seen pushing each other backward and forward during the struggle

 

According to body camera footage cited in the report, Hill told officers she confronted McLemore about how money connected to Black Lives Matter was being used.

'I told him, "It's not fair that I come here and I work and you running around taking care of other things that don't got nothing to do with Black Lives Matter with Black Lives Matter money,"' Hill said, according to the footage.

'I'm the one that make this joint work,' she added.

Hill told officers she refused to leave the office until she received the money she said she was owed.

She alleged the fight began when McLemore got up from his chair and pushed her with his hands in an attempt to force her out of the room.

Hill said the confrontation quickly escalated into a physical struggle between the two.

Police observed that Hill had a scratch on her lip and several broken fingernails after the fight.

Like McLemore, Hill also declined to pursue charges.

She told officers she 'does not want to see a black man in jail,' but asked that a police report and witness statement be taken.

Because both individuals had injuries and their accounts of the altercation conflicted, officers said they did not have probable cause to make an arrest.

 

McLemore told police Hill entered his office demanding money and cigarettes before the confrontation escalated leaving papers all over the floor

McLemore told police Hill entered his office demanding money and cigarettes before the confrontation escalated leaving papers all over the floor

In bodycam footage, Hill accused McLemore of spending Black Lives Matter funds on things unrelated to the organization

In bodycam footage, Hill accused McLemore of spending Black Lives Matter funds on things unrelated to the organization

The surveillance recording shows the altercation unfolding in the hallway area of the organization¿s Waukegan headquarters with McLemore seen on the floor

The surveillance recording shows the altercation unfolding in the hallway area of the organization’s Waukegan headquarters with McLemore seen on the floor 

The hallway altercation appeared to stem from an argument about money

The hallway altercation appeared to stem from an argument about money

 

Instead, police advised both parties to avoid contact and informed them about how to obtain an order of protection.

The January confrontation was not the only violent clash between the two captured on video.

Police later obtained surveillance footage showing a separate physical fight between Hill and McLemore inside the same office months earlier.

Authorities said the earlier video shows another struggle between the pair that also stemmed from a dispute about money. It remains unclear exactly when that incident occurred.

Hill told police the video was from November 24, while McLemore said it happened on November 2. The timestamp on the recording itself lists October 24.

Detectives obtained the footage after responding to the January 12 incident.

When investigators later spoke to McLemore about the earlier altercation, he told them his office surveillance system only retains footage for about two months and that he did not have a copy of the recording.

He also told detectives there was no surveillance video of the January fight because the altercation occurred inside his office, which is not covered by cameras.

The footage and body-camera recordings also captured Hill telling officers that the pair had clashed repeatedly over finances tied to the organization.

According to the footage, Hill told officers she frequently argued with McLemore over not being paid for her work while she struggled to support her child.

In her statement to police, Hill also alleged that she had seen McLemore spend money intended for Black Lives Matter activities on other things, including 'girls' and gambling.

 

Clyde McLemore told officers the confrontation began after he refused Hill¿s demand for money. He is pictured here in 2021

Clyde McLemore told officers the confrontation began after he refused Hill’s demand for money. He is pictured here in 2021

During the corridor clash, the two can be seen lunging toward each other as the argument turns physical

During the corridor clash, the two can be seen lunging toward each other as the argument turns physical

The footage captures the pair clutching at each other¿s clothing during the struggle in the corridor

The footage captures the pair clutching at each other’s clothing during the struggle in the corridor

 

Court records show the dispute later spilled into the legal system.

McLemore subsequently went to the Lake County Courthouse and obtained an emergency stalking no-contact order against Hill.

Both individuals involved in the altercation have prior legal histories.

Court records show McLemore was sentenced in October 2024 to 40 days in jail for taking photographs inside the Lake County Circuit Court and posting them online in violation of courthouse rules.

He later posted a video acknowledging the incident and saying, 'I do what I want to do.'

McLemore has also previously been arrested for trespassing during a Waukegan City Council meeting in October 2022 and for participating in civil unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in February 2021.

Hill also has a criminal history with records showing she was previously charged in a kidnapping case in Zion in June 2020 in which prosecutors alleged she and an accomplice beat a victim and demanded a ransom for his release.

She was later sentenced to more than four years in prison in that case.

McLemore currently serves as a member of the Lake County Regional Board of School Trustees while also leading the Black Lives Matter Lake County chapter.

ISRAEL MAKES IT HARD TO SELECT KHAMENEI'S SUCCESSOR BY TARGETING IRAN'S ASSEMBLY OF EXPERTS

Report: Israel struck the committee tasked with choosing Khamenei's successor

Strike in the city of Qom hit the building housing Iran's Assembly of Experts; according to some reports, many were wounded and killed. On Monday, a building that previously served as the Iranian parliament was struck.

 



Israel Hayom
Mar 3, 2026 
 
 

Members of the Assembly of Experts argue in a forum 

Members of Iran’s Assembly of Experts which selects Khamenei's successor.

 

 

Israel struck the building housing Iran's Assembly of Experts in Qom on Tuesday, targeting the institution charged with naming a successor to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was eliminated by Israel. Iranian reports also indicated a major strike on Mehrabad Airport in the capital, Tehran.
 
According to Iranian reports, the Assembly of Experts' office building was struck. On Monday, reports said, the previous building that had served as the Iranian parliament was also hit. An Iranian channel reported that a meeting had been held in the building before the strike, aimed at selecting the next leader of the Islamic Republic. Many members of the council were reportedly killed or wounded.

"There is an orderly process here – the Assembly of Experts will choose – but there are several question marks we know nothing about," Danny Citrinowicz, a former head of the Iran Branch at Military Intelligence Directorate, said. "It is not certain this will go smoothly. We don't know whether any preparation took place behind the scenes."

Under the Iranian constitution, the Assembly of Experts – a body of 88 senior clerics – is responsible for choosing the next supreme leader. According to The New York Times, a three-member committee appointed by Khamenei himself roughly two years ago accelerated its work following the 12-day war last June and selected three candidates in the event he was eliminated, though their names have remained classified.

Iranian adviser Ali Larijani announced Tuesday morning that a leadership council had been established, comprising the president, the head of the judiciary, and one of the clerics of the Guardian Council, to replace Supreme Leader Khamenei until a successor is chosen.

AN ANTI-IRAN WAR COALITION OF THE FAR-LEFT AND THE FAR-RIGHT

Trump’s critics have a lot riding on the Iran conflict

United by their hostility to Israel, the liberal establishment, leftists and right-wing antisemites are hoping to capitalize on a disaster. But it could also backfire on them. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Mar 2, 2026

 

 

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Tucker Carlson (Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images)
Tucker Carlson and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez 
 

Whether they admit it or not, a lot of people are rooting for disaster for the United States and Israel in the conflict that began on Feb. 28, with the two allies attacking the Islamic Republic’s leadership and military targets. And it’s not overstating the matter to acknowledge that the diverse coalition of opponents of President Donald Trump and the Jewish state has a lot riding on whether their Cassandra-like predictions of doom for the administration turn out to be right.

If they are, then the extreme right wing of the Republican Party, led by antisemitic podcasters like former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, has an opening that they would hope to use to take over the GOP. A disaster in Iran will also put even more wind in the sails of the intersectional left-wing base of the Democratic Party. If that happens, its leading figures, like New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, will hope it means that their faction will be in a position to name their party’s 2028 presidential nominee.

Meanwhile, the somewhat less ideological veterans of the Obama and Biden presidencies, of whom the most prominent figure today remains former Vice President Kamala Harris, and their liberal press corps rooting section will also assert that their belief in appeasement of Tehran has been vindicated.

Betting on the regime’s survival

Such a result will be a political landscape that will not only look bleak for conservatives and Trump supporters. It might also be a body blow to the last vestiges of what was once a bipartisan consensus in support of Israel that stretched across the American political spectrum. That’s because the one thing that links various elements of the loose, anti-Iran war coalition is hostility to, if not outright hatred for, the State of Israel.

Their assumptions about the attack on Iran are based on a belief in the resilience of an evil terrorist regime, coupled with a conviction that Trump’s belief in the importance of the U.S.-Israel alliance is inherently wrong. They are sure that either the Islamist Republic will survive or that its ouster will lead to chaos that will harm U.S. interests. Many of them are also convinced that, despite Trump’s clear intentions to avoid such a scenario, the United States is likely to be bogged down in an endless and unsuccessful conflict in the Middle East. Indeed, some are counting on it resembling those in Afghanistan, and even more so Iraq, which Trump critics on both the left and right are citing as a likely precedent for his decision. And that’s not even taking into account the way some in the Democratic base tend to sympathize with anyone who is at war with the West.

Disillusionment over those wars led to the success of anti-war factions and played a significant role in the rise of President Barack Obama and then Trump. If that scenario is repeated, it could result in the capture of both major political parties by extremists who have nothing in common but their desire to abandon Israel to its fate in a region still dominated by genocidal Islamists. It could also impact the flow of and price of oil. And that could lead to higher gas prices in the United States and hurt Republicans in the midterms, leading to two years of Democratic congressional control that would hamstring what was left of the Trump presidency.

Of course, there’s a chance that they are right and that the Iranian government—or what’s left of it after strike after strike has decapitated its leadership—will ultimately prevail in one way or another. If so, it would be just another example of a second presidential term that was undone by a foreign-policy misjudgment.

Thinking like Khamenei and Sinwar

But it’s also very possible, if not likely, that they are citing the wrong precedent when they talk about another Iraq. They could be making the same mistake others have made when they underestimated Trump’s savvy and leadership. They could also be channeling the same catastrophic mistake as those who assumed that Israel was ripe for a defeat that could lead to a collapse in 2023.

The late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Hamas senior leader Yahya Sinwar never imagined that the war they launched on Oct. 7 with unspeakable atrocities and the largest mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust would turn out the way it has. Not only are they, in addition to many of their associates and followers, dead; the Islamist movement has suffered major defeats in Gaza and Lebanon, in Syria with the fall of longtime dictator Bashar Assad, and now, in Iran. Israel was shaken by that surprise invasion and attack, but it rebounded and is in a much stronger strategic position than it was 29 months ago.

The impact on American politics of success in Iran, which could entail the fall of the Islamist regime as well as the further weakening of its allies in the region, could be just as significant.

Since the fighting may go on, as Trump has indicated, for weeks, predictions as to how it will turn out are, at best, premature.

Given that Trump is mindful of the Afghanistan and Iraq precedents, he will never agree to a U.S. land invasion; what follows these strikes will depend on the actions of the Iranian people as much as on the American and Israeli militaries. We don’t know yet if Iranian dissidents—either from within the regime or those who have demonstrated in the streets against the tyrannical theocrats—can seize the opportunity Trump has given them.

Even if they can’t, a few weeks of pounding from these two potent militaries will not be without effect. While the Islamists may not fall, Washington will be able to ensure the flow of oil from the Persian Gulf, no matter what happens in Tehran. That would likely leave the regime in a position where its ability to inflict harm on the region would be severely diminished.

That, in turn, will make their allies in Gaza, Lebanon and Yemen much weaker. And it would give Trump the room to maneuver that could also lead to better outcomes in Gaza, where Hamas is hanging on, as well as the further weakening of Hezbollah in Lebanon. The latter terrorist organization fired on Israel during the war’s second day, but the reaction from the Lebanese government to the prospect of being dragged into a war to defend the Iranian regime indicated that the era in which Hezbollah dominates that country may be about to end. Far from the war expanding, a weakened Tehran with no ability to inflict further mayhem would only strengthen U.S. allies like Israel and Saudi Arabia, and open the possibility of expanding Trump’s 2020 Abraham Accords.

While U.S. elections are determined by economic issues far more than anything that happens abroad, the scenarios in which Trump benefits from his Iran decision seem more realistic than those that predict disaster.

Exposing Carlson and Vance

Indeed, anything short of disaster in Iran will significantly damage Trump’s right-wing critics. Carlson and other extremist podcasters who have been trafficking in antisemitic tropes about Israel dragging America into war, and smearing the Jewish state and its supporters, have been speaking as if this is their moment.

Carlson has ignored Trump’s demands that he desist from this antisemitic campaign and has instead doubled down on it again. His description of the president’s decision as “absolutely disgusting and evil,” predicting that it “will shuffle the deck in a significant way”—presumably, in his favor—presages a full break with Trump.

Simply put, after this, Carlson can’t pretend that he is merely trying to push Trump in a different direction. He has now joined the anti-Trump resistance.

He has plenty of company there. More than that, his assumption that he speaks for the GOP grassroots may be about to be exposed as a big lie. To date, there is no evidence that Carlson—and the rest of the anti-Israel and antisemitic right-wing podcaster corps, including the likes of the ever more fanatical Candace Owens, neo-Nazi groyper Nick Fuentes and their once mainstream ally, media personality Megyn Kelly—speak for a genuine political movement.

These political commentators may have a lot of viewers and listeners, but how many of them are bots, as opposed to Republican primary voters? Unlike the left, there is no indication that in 2027, there will be a right-wing “Squad” of antisemites to make common cause with the dozens of Israel-hating “progressives” caucusing with the Democrats.

Anything short of the sort of Iraq-style fiasco in Iran that Trump is deliberately refusing to allow to happen will expose this segment of the MAGA movement as a politically marginal faction in a way that is not true of the left.

That could also undermine the prospects of Vice President JD Vance, whose huge lead for the 2028 GOP presidential nomination could diminish if he doesn’t soon disassociate himself from Carlson. It could open up the possibility of U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio getting into a race that he now says he won’t enter. Rubio has become far more visible and seemingly close to Trump in the past few months as foreign-policy issues relating to Venezuela, relations with America’s European allies, the president’s Board of Peace to help reconstruct Gaza and the conflict with Iran have dominated the news. A good outcome—or at least one that is not another Iraq—makes him the most important figure in the administration not named Trump.

The left’s stake in regime survival

The strengthening of Israel as a result of events in Iran could also impact the Democrats.

Nothing—not even the collapse of a terror regime in Iran—will convince the Trump-haters that the president is right about anything. They are ideologically and temperamentally committed to “resisting” the president, rather than being a loyal opposition. The Democrats’ left-wing base is also wedded to toxic, left-wing, neo-Marxist ideas that have convinced them of the truth of the big lies about Israel—and its Jewish supporters—as being “white” oppressors. It also leads some to sympathize with or at least oppose action against Islamist terrorists like the Iranian regime and Hamas.

What they aren’t counting on is a transformation of the Middle East in which anti-Israel Islamists and other extremists are no longer able to bolster the Palestinians’ century-old futile war against the Jewish state. That won’t silence the Israel-haters that proliferate throughout the liberal mainstream media and elsewhere in society. But it will make it easier for a counter-force of moderates who, at the very least, don’t want to support a genocidal war against Israel to further tarnish the Democrats’ brand to emerge as a force in 2028. If the war in Iran makes future conflict less likely, that exposes and undermines left-wingers who have gone all-in on Israel-bashing and helps those who want to talk about other issues.

Such a faction won’t agree with Trump on the Middle East in the manner of a Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) or likely nominate an ardent supporter of Jerusalem. But it will further diminish the influence of the Obama administration alumni and liberal critics of Israel, who have been wrong about everything in the Middle East for the past four decades.

A good outcome opens up the possibility of a future in which both parties move in a more reasonable direction on Israel and the Middle East, and harm the prospects of extremists who share a predilection for antisemitism.

There may be much to fear in the coming days and weeks as the wounded regime seeks to lash out and, as it has already done, kill Americans, Israelis, residents of the Gulf States and wherever else it might reach with its missiles.

Still, what those who are betting on disaster in Iran aren’t taking into account is the possibility that Trump’s keen instincts for when to strike and his instinctual good judgment when it comes to defending American interests against its enemies will actually be a political success for him—and a defeat for both his left-wing and right-wing opponents.

INSPIRED BY TURKEY AND QATAR, INSTEAD OF NORMALIZATION WITH ISRAEL, MBS TURNS AGAINST THE JEWISH STATE

Saudi Arabia’s MBS seeks to weaken Israel

Riyadh’s shift to Islamism is inspired by Qatar and Turkey, whose Muslim Brotherhood-aligned policies expanded their regional influence without triggering alarm bells in Washington. 

 

By Joseph Puder 

 

JNS

Mar 3, 2026

 

 

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (L) meets Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (R) and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman before the World Cup opening ceremony, Doha, Qatar, Nov. 20, 2022. (AA Photo)
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (L), Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (R) and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman 

In recent months, Saudi Arabia and its de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman (MBS), have taken an increasingly anti-Israel stance and turned away from the expected normalization with the Jewish state that U.S. President Donald Trump has sought to achieve by adding the Middle Eastern nation to the Abraham Accords.

Riyadh shifted significantly from what was perceived to be imminent normalization with Israel to open diplomatic confrontation, partially due to the ongoing conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon.

Apparently, Israel’s emergence as a Middle Eastern power, following the debacle of Oct. 7, 2023, and Israel’s subsequent successful campaigns against the Islamic Republic of Iran’s proxies—Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran itself—concerned MBS. He has thus taken a chapter from the late Henry Kissinger’s 1954 Ph.D. dissertation titled “Peace, Legitimacy and the Equilibrium.” It was republished in 1957 as a book titled A World Restored.

Kissinger, the former U.S. Secretary of State under presidents Nixon and Ford, focused his thesis on two conservative 19th-century European leaders: Habsburg Austria’s Chancellor Klemens von Metternich and Britain’s Foreign Minister Robert Stewart, better known as Viscount Castlereagh.

These two European monarchical leaders searched for peace and a way to restructure Europe following the bloody Napoleonic wars, followed by the Congress of Vienna (1814-15).

For Metternich, the fear of the emergence of another revolutionary power, as Napoleon’s France was, necessitated a balance of power.

Both Metternich and Castlereagh were assessing Russia’s territorial gains against the Ottoman Turks, as well as its growing power and confidence. Metternich, an astute diplomat, sought to form a coalition against any too-powerful continental state. Britain and France would eventually fight Tsarist Russia in the Crimean War (1853-1856).

Like Metternich, MBS is seeking to weaken Israel’s influence and power in the region. The Saudis perceive Israel as competing with them for regional hegemony. By bribing U.S. President Donald Trump with promises of billions in investments, MBS hopes to replace Jerusalem as the U.S. strategic ally in the region.

Although MBS is no Metternich, by any standard, he is nonetheless seeking to build a coalition ostensibly against Israel. On Jan. 9, Bloomberg reported that Turkey was likely to join the defense pact between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, and that talks to do so were in an “advanced” stage. Later that month, Pakistan’s Minister for Defense Production told Reuters that a draft defense deal between the three countries had been prepared.

It is rather ironic that the two Sunni Muslim powers—Turkey and Saudi Arabia, who have been bitter rivals over leadership of the Sunni-Muslim world—would now seek an alliance. One still remembers the murder of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul, Turkey, and the bitter recriminations between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and MBS. But this partnership can be seen as an opportunity to threaten Israel. And, it is also meant to provide Turkey and the Saudis with Pakistan’s nuclear umbrella.

Iran, Saudi Arabia’s chief adversary, responsible for having orchestrated an attack in 2019 on the Saudi ARAMCO oil processing fields, has been debilitated by the combined American and Israeli attack on its nuclear facilities last June. The Saudis, in assessing Iran’s current situation of largely neutralized proxies and an economy in shambles, are pleased that “the dirty work” was done for them.

They are, however, reluctant to support regime change in Iran that might allow for a democratic, pro-Western regime to emerge. They would rather see a weakened regime in Tehran than a new regime that might make peace with Israel. A democratic, pro-Western Iran might diminish Saudi Arabia’s luster in today’s Washington.

Naturally, the Saudis have expressed little sympathy for the repressed Iranian people. Riyadh prefers the diminished power of the mullahs, their domestic challenges and their being isolated internationally over the plight of civilians. In fact, the Saudis, along with the Qataris, and Erdoğan’s Turkey have notified Washington that they will not allow the United States to launch attacks on Iran from their territory. It simply shows how unreliable these supposed U.S. “allies” actually are.

Saudi Arabia wants to replace Israel with Syria as the transit country for a fiber-optic cable designed to connect the Saudi kingdom to Greece through the Mediterranean Sea. Riyadh’s insistence that it be connected to Greece through Syria—and not Israel—underscores how regional alignments are shifting as Riyadh looks to bolster Damascus’s standing in the region and potentially isolate Israel.

MBS has publicly accused Israel of committing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza, despite previously shunning Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated Hamas terrorists. Now it seems that he is seeking to make peace and ally himself with forces, including Qatar and Turkey. Riyadh is also at odds with the United Arab Emirates, Israel’s closest Arab partner. In an interview, former Saudi Shura Council member Ahmed Al-Tuwaijri accused the UAE of being “Israel’s Trojan horse.” He added that Abu Dhabi is implementing Israeli ambitions.

Seemingly, the failure of MBS’s Vision 2030—an ambitious plan to diversify Saudi Arabia’s oil-dependent economy, reshape its society and position the kingdom as a global investment hub—has resulted in MBS’s abandoning the Emirati model of economic transformation, moving from an oil economy to services. It seems that he has replaced Neom (MBS’s futuristic city) with a Turkish-style approach: masking economic trouble with populist appeals to restored Islamic glory, beginning with hostility toward Israel.

Saudi Arabia’s shift to Islamism is inspired by Qatar and Turkey, whose Muslim Brotherhood-aligned policies expanded their regional influence without triggering alarm bells in Washington, thanks in part to the strength of Doha’s and Ankara’s lobbying operations in the U.S. capital.

In the end, it is the old balance-of-power game that nations play that seems to be a major factor in aligning the Saudi regime with former rivals to block the perceived rise of the Jewish state.

ALERRT MAY HAVE PREVENTED A GREATER LOSS OF LIVES AND INJURIES

Texas-based ALERRT program under spotlight after Austin mass shooting 

 



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